2.02 - Kinetics & Dynamics Of Commonly Used Cardiac Drugs Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four classes of antiarrhythmic drugs?

A

Class I: voltage sensitive sodium blockers

Class II: beta-adrenoreceptor antagonists

Class III: prolong cardiac action potential

Class IV: calcium antagonists

Other unclassified drugs

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2
Q

Describe the action of Class I Antiarrhythmics and provide examples

A

Class I split in to Class Ia, Ib & Ic

All Class I drugs inhibit phase 0 (upstroke) and therefore decrease conduction velocity

They also prolong repolarisation - increased the effective refractory period

Examples: Quinidine (Ia), Lidocaine (Ib) and Flecainide (Ic)

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3
Q

Describe Class II Antiarrhythmics

A

Beta-blockers. Inhibit sympathetic input on the pacing of the heart by blocking beta1 adrenoceptors

Used most commonly for supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias caused by sympathetic stimulation

Side effects: bronchospasm, cold extremities, impotence (due to beta2 blockade). Excessage negative inotropic effect –> heart block, bradycardia (excessive beta1 blockade). Insomnia, depression.

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4
Q

Describe Class III Antiarrhythmics

A

Inhibit K+ channels (inhibit repolarisation)

Increase the duration of Phase II (plateau) –> prolonged repolarisation

Example: Ibutilide

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5
Q

Describe Class IV Antiarrhythmics

A

Act preferentially on SA and AV nodes.

Slow action potential upstroke - slows conduction velocity through AV node

Example: Verapamil (more effective on calcium currents in cardiac tissue)

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6
Q

What classes of drugs are used in the treatment of Heart Failure

A

Positive inotropic drugs: cardiac glycosides, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, beta-adrenoreceptor agonists

Drugs acting on non-cardiac targets: diuretics, ACE inhibitors, AT1R antagonists, beta-adrenceptor antagonists

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7
Q

Describe the Cardiac Glycosides and provide an example

A

Example: Digoxin

Inhibit Na/K ATPase –> relative reduction of calcium expulsion –> increased contractility

Narrow therapeutic window

Other drugs and disease states can increase the plasma concentrations of Digoxin (chronic renal failure, antibiotics, verapamil)

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8
Q

Describe Beta-Adrenceptor Agonists in the treatment of heart failure and provide examples

A

E.g. Dobutamine

Positive inotropic and chronotropic effects. Beta1 stimulation increases adenylyl cyclase activity –> increased cAMP –> activation of PKA –> opening of calcium channels –> increaseing calcium levels –> increased contractility

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9
Q

Describe the Phosphodiesterase Inhibitors in the treatment of heart failure

A

Amrinone, Milrinone

Block the breakdown of cAMP by phosphodiesterase –> increased PKA –> increased calcium levels –> increased contractility

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10
Q

Describe the ACE Inhibitors in the treatment of heart failure

A

Captopril, Enalapril

Block the formation of AngII (prevent vasocontriction, water retention, hypertrophy/hyperplasia)

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11
Q

Describe the effect of spironolactone in the treatment of heart failure

A

Competitive antagonist of mineralocorticoid receptor in the kidneys –> prevent action of aldosterone –> decreased ENaC expression in collecting tubules –> decreased Na reabsorption –> decreased water reabsorption

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12
Q

Describe the action of Beta-Blockers in the treatment of heart failure

A

Propranolol, carvedilol.

May seem counterintuitive due to negative inotropic effect.

But inhibit the sympathetic nervous system compensation and also inhibit renin release

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13
Q

What classes of drugs are used in the treatmentof Angina?

A

Vasodilators: organic nitrates, calcium channel blockers

Non-vasodilators: beta blockers

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14
Q

Describe the effect of organic nitrates in the threatment of Angina

A

Nitroglycerin

Converted to NO (active form) –> increased cGMP in VSMCs –> decreased intracellular calcium –> vasodilation

Very high first pass effect, so given sublingually. Short duration of action (15-30min)

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15
Q

Describe the use of Calcium Channel bockers in the treatment of Angina

A

Verapamil (cardiac), Nifedipine (vascular)

Block the inward movement of Calcium.

Active on smooth muscles (vasodilation) and cariac muscles (reduce oxygen requirement)

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16
Q

Describe the use of beta-blockers in the treatment of angina

A

Decrease heart rate, blood pressure and contractility –> decreased myocardial O2 requirement