Pharm
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor
search
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor
, MAO Inhibitor, MAOI, Moclobemide
See Also
Antidepressant
Indications
Refractory
Major Depression
Anxiety Disorder
Atypical Depression
Refractory Depression
Bulimia
Social Phobia
Narcolepsy
Parkinsonism
Multiple System Atrophy
Background
Among the first
Antidepressant
s developed (1950s)
Precautions
Limit use to refractory mental health or neurologic conditions due to high risk of adverse effects and
Drug Interaction
s
Tyramine-free diet must be followed
Continue for two weeks after stopping medication
See
Tyramine Containing Food
s
Stop 2 weeks before starting another
Antidepressant
Taper
Phenelzine
(
Nardil
) slowly when stopping
See
Antidepressant Withdrawal
Reduce dose by 15 mg/day every 2 weeks (or 10%/week)
Mechanism
Inhibits monoamine oxidase
Monoamine Oxidase is the enzyme that breaks down biogenic amines (e.g.
Norepinephrine
,
Serotonin
,
Dopamine
, Tyramine)
Type A Monoamine Oxidase affects
Gastrointestinal System
(intestinal tract, liver, placenta)
Metabolizes
Serotonin
and
Norepinephrine
(as well as
Dopamine
, tyramine)
Type B Monoamine Oxidase affects
Central Nervous System
(as well as liver and
Platelet
s)
Metabolizes phenylethylamine, methylhistamine and tryptamine (as well as
Dopamine
, tyramine)
Most MAO Inhibitors block MAO irreversibly for weeks (only Moclobemide and
Safinamide
are reversible)
MAO Inhibitors have a similar structure to
Amphetamine
Older MAO Inhibitors are nonspecific and affect both Type A and B (e.g. trancypromine,
Phenelzine
)
Selegiline
is specific for Type B and is used in
Parkinsonism
MAO Inhibition increases synaptic concentration of monoamines
Serotonin
Norepinephrine
Dopamine
Tyramine
Images
Preparations
Non-Selective (Inhibit both MAO-A and MAO-B)
Hydrazine (hepatotoxicity risk)
Isocarboxazid
(
Marplan
): No longer manufactured in U.S.
Dosing: 10 mg PO bid
Maximum: 60 mg per day
Phenelzine
(
Nardil
)
Dosing: 15 mg PO tid
Maximum: 90 mg per day
Non-hydrazine
Tranylcypromine
(
Parnate
)
Dosing: 10-40 mg/day in divided doses
Maximum: 60 mg per day
Preparations
Selective MAO Inhibitors
Selective MAO-A Inhibitors
Moclobemide (reversible MAO Inhibitor)
Major Depression
: 150 mg orally twice daily after meals
Maximum dose: 600 mg/day (divided twice daily)
Selective MAO-B Inhibitors (Parkinsonian agents)
Selegiline
(
Eldepryl
,
Emsam
)
Major Depression
: Transdermal patch 6 mg/24 hours (maximum dose 12 mg/24 hours)
Parkinsonism
: 5 mg orally twice daily at breakfast and lunch
Rasagiline
(
Azilect
)
Parkinsonism
: 0.5 mg orally daily (may be increased to 1 mg orally daily)
Safinamide
(
Xadago
, reversible MAO Inhibitor)
Parkinsonism
: 50 mg orally daily (may be increased to 100 mg orally daily after 2 weeks)
Preparations
Other agents with MAO Inhibitor Activity
Linezolid
St John's Wort
Contains
Hypericin
and Hyperforin (weak Type A and B MAO Inhibitors)
Complications
Hypertensive Crisis
(life-threatening)
Occurs if tyramine or
Sympathomimetic
exposure
Treat with
Phentolamine
(alpha-adrenergic
Antagonist
)
Overdose
Hypotension
to cardiovascular collapse
Also presents with
Serotonin Syndrome
(
Agitation
,
Hallucination
s, hyperreflexia, fever,
Seizure
s)
Treat with
Intravenous Fluid
s and direct acting
Vasopressor
s (e.g.
Norepinephrine
)
Serotonin Syndrome
Occurs with concurrent use of other
Serotoninergic
drug, or in
Overdose
Drug Interactions
MAO Inhibitors potentiate
Sympathomimetic
s (Do not use with these medications within 2 weeks)
Tyramine Containing Food
s
Sympathomimetic
s (
Ephedra
,
Ephedrine
, pseudophedrine,
Phenylephrine
)
Gene
ral
Anesthesia
Cyclobenzaprine
(
Flexeril
)
Specific
Opioid
s
Meperidine
(
Demerol
)
Methadone
Tramadol
Dextromethorphan
Serotonergic Medication
s (
Serotonin Syndrome
risk)
Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor
s (
SSRI
)
Serotonin Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor
Tricyclic Antidepressant
Atypical
Antidepressant
s (
Bupropion
,
Mirtazapine
)
Other
Serotonergic Medication
s (e.g.
Tramadol
,
Meperidine
,
Methadone
,
Dextromethorphan
,
St. John's Wort
)
Metabolism
MAO Inhibitors are inactivated by acetylation
Slow acetylators (genetic predisposition) will have elevated serum levels of MAO Inhibitors
Adverse Effects
Anti-
Histamine
rgic effects
Dizziness
Sedation
Orthostatic Hypotension
Weight gain
Dopamine
rgic effects
Insomnia
Myoclonal jerks
Serotoninergic
Effects
Sexual Dysfunction
Headache
Anticholinergic Toxicity
Dry Mouth
Constipation
Blurred Vision
Urinary hesitancy
Nausea
Memory Dysfunction
Other Effects
Peripheral Edema
Weakness
Hepatotoxicity
References
Sub Laban and Saadabadi (2022) Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors, StatPearls, Treasure Island
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK539848/
Nordt and Shoenberger in Herbert (2019) EM:Rap 19(3): 8-9
Olson (2020) Clinical
Pharmacology
, Medmaster, Miami, p. 36-7
Type your search phrase here