25 - Poisoning and STOPP START Flashcards

1
Q

What is pharmacological toxicity usually due to?

A

A predictable extension of the desired effect of the drug at the known site

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2
Q

Give some examples of how the following drugs can have pharmacological toxicity at slightly supratherapeutic doses:

  • Warfarin
  • Loop Diuretic
  • AChE Inhibitors

Insulin

A

Exaggeration of their desired effect

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3
Q

What are some of the pharmacologically toxic effects of the following (not related to the drugs usual desired effects):

  • Statin
  • B-agonist
  • Thalidomide
  • B-blocker
A
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4
Q

What are some effects seen in large overdoses of the following drugs:

  • Beta Blocker
  • Opioids
  • Theophylline
  • Carbamazepine
  • Phenobarbital
A
  • Myocardial depression
  • Respiratory depression, tachycardia, hypotensive
  • Convulsions, arrhythmias
  • Respiratory depression
  • Respiratory depression
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5
Q

Identify five common UK poisons.

A
  • Paracetamol
  • Hypnotics (diazepam, zoplicone)
  • Salicylates
  • Ecstasy
  • Opiates
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6
Q

what do you co prescribe when treating someone with Chemo

A

→ anti-emetics

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7
Q

what do you co prescribe someone taking methotrexate

A

→ folate

it is a dihydrofolate reductase blocker

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8
Q

What is biochemical toxicity?

A
  • A drug or active metabolite which causes cellular damage to macromolecules such as structural proteins and enzymes
  • Drugs on the market are tested for this but at supratherapeutic doses they often have build up of toxic metabolites
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9
Q

What are the antidotes for an overdose of the following drugs:

  • Digoxin
  • Cocaine
  • Paracetamol
  • Benzodiazepene
  • Opiate
  • Beta Blocker
A
  • Can also give chelating agents that complex with the poison to reduce the amount of free drug (e.g in lead, cyanide and iron salt poisoning)
  • Digibound is antibody (so is antivenom)
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10
Q

How does the antidote for paracetamol overdose work?

A

N-Acetyl Cysteine

  • Donates thiol to glutathione to drive phase 2 and prevent build up of toxic metabolites to stop centrilobular necrosis
  • In OD the glutathione is saturated so cannot conjugate anymore NAPQI so build up of NAPQI
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11
Q

How can we overcome biological toxicity of drugs that are used at therapeutic levels e.g the DMARD cyclophosphamide?

A
  • Use Mesna 2 hours before orally or in IV with cyclophosphamide
  • Has a thiol group for cytoprotection and a polar group so it can get renally excreted and get to the right place to protect bladder epithelium
  • Mesna helps stop haemorraghic cystitis
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12
Q

In general what are the management principles for a drug overdose?

A

Immediately:

  • Remove person from contact with poison
  • Take vital signs and look for injuries
  • Take history from patient, chaperone, written notes or packaging
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13
Q

What are some scenarios you need to consider that might need supportive measures to correct when a person is having a drug overdose?

A
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14
Q

How can we prevent absorption of a drug and increase it’s elimination in a drug overdose?

A

- Never gastric lavage due to risk of aspiration

- Give lots of activated charcoal in water if conscious to prevent absorption

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15
Q

What is fomepizole used for?

A

Stops ethylene glycol and methanol poisoning by altering the metabolism to stop the production of toxic metabolites

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16
Q

What is the antidote for organophosphate poisoning?

A

ATROPINE: Antimuscarinic

17
Q

What is polypharmacy?

A

When a patient is taking 4-6+ medicines concurrently

18
Q

Which patients should have their medications reviewed regularly?

A

Helps to improve the clinical outcomes for the patient and our economy as ensures investing in the right place

19
Q

What are some things that need to be checked in a medication review?

A
  • Is the medication right for the patient?
  • Time limited medications (e.g clopidogrel, GORD treatment)
  • Medications considered during admission but not on discharge (e.g hypnotics)
  • Age-life expectancy and risk benefit
  • Is the medication producing a measurable outcome (e.g HbA1c change)
  • Cost
  • DDIs, ADRs and contraindications
  • Concordance
  • Over the counter and complimentary medications
  • Lifestyle modifications
20
Q

What is the STOPP START tool?

A

Screening tool of older people’s prescriptions and screening tool to alert to right treatment

Used in over 65s to stop and start certain drugs to prevent inappropriate prescribing and reduce DDIs and ADRs

21
Q

What is the medication regime prescribed after an MI?

A

A - Aspirin

T - Ticagrelor

A - ACEi or ARBs

B - Betablockers

S - Statins

A and T are two antiplatelets

22
Q

which patients should be targeted for review

A

→ patients taking lots of medications

→ frequent admissions to hospital

→ comorbidities

→ recently discharged

23
Q

what are some pharmokinetic factors you have to account for in older people

A

→ body composition (more fat)

→ real mass and function reduced

→ GI absorption and risk of bleed

→ reduced first pass metabolism