Since dopamine is inactivated by norepinephrine reuptake in frontal cortex, which largely lacks dopamine transporters, protriptyline can increase dopamine neurotransmission in this part of the brain
A more potent inhibitor of norepinephrine reuptake pump than serotonin reuptake pump (serotonin transporter)
At high doses may also boost neurotransmitter serotonin and presumably increase serotonergic neurotransmission
How Long Until It Works
Some evidence it may have an early onset of action with improvement in activity and energy as early as 1 week
Onset of therapeutic actions usually not immediate, but often delayed 2 to 4 weeks
If it is not working within 6 to 8 weeks for depression, it may require a dosage increase or it may not work at all
May continue to work for many years to prevent relapse of symptoms
If It Works
The goal of treatment is complete remission of current symptoms as well as prevention of future relapses
Treatment most often reduces or even eliminates symptoms, but not a cure since symptoms can recur after medicine stopped
Continue treatment until all symptoms are gone (remission)
Once symptoms gone, continue treating for 1 year for the first episode of depression
For second and subsequent episodes of depression, treatment may need to be indefinite
Use in anxiety disorders may also need to be indefinite
If It Doesn’t Work
Many patients have only a partial response where some symptoms are improved but others persist (especially insomnia, fatigue, and problems concentrating)
Other patients may be nonresponders, sometimes called treatment-resistant or treatment-refractory
Consider increasing dose, switching to another agent or adding an appropriate augmenting agent
Consider psychotherapy
Consider evaluation for another diagnosis or for a comorbid condition (e.g., medical illness, substance abuse, etc.)
Some patients may experience apparent lack of consistent efficacy due to activation of latent or underlying bipolar disorder, and require antidepressant discontinuation and a switch to a mood stabilizer
Best Augmenting Combos for Partial Response or Treatment Resistance
Lithium, buspirone, thyroid hormone
Tests
None for healthy individuals
Since tricyclic and tetracyclic antidepressants are frequently associated with weight gain, before starting treatment, weigh all patients and determine if the patient is already overweight (BMI 25.0–29.9) or obese (BMI ≥30)
Before giving a drug that can cause weight gain to an overweight or obese patient, consider determining whether the patient already has pre-diabetes (fasting plasma glucose 100–25 mg/dL), diabetes (fasting plasma glucose >126 mg/dL), or dyslipidemia (increased total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol and triglycerides; decreased HDL cholesterol), and treat or refer such patients for treatment, including nutrition and weight management, physical activity counseling, smoking cessation, and medical management
Monitor weight and BMI during treatment
While giving a drug to a patient who has gained >5% of initial weight, consider evaluating for the presence of pre-diabetes, diabetes, or dyslipidemia, or consider switching to a different antidepressant
EKGs may be useful for selected patients (e.g., those with personal or family history of QTc prolongation; cardiac arrhythmia; recent myocardial infarction; uncompensated heart failure; or taking agents that prolong QTc interval such as pimozide, thioridazine, selected antiarrhythmics, moxifloxacin, sparfloxacin, etc.)
Patients at risk for electrolyte disturbances (e.g., patients on diuretic therapy) should have baseline and periodic serum potassium and magnesium measurements