anemia pharm Flashcards

1
Q

epoetin alfa: classification and MOA

A

ethropoeisis stimulating agent

moa: mimics human erythropoietin (stimulates production of RBC in bone marrow)

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2
Q

epoetin alfa: indications

A

-chronic kidney disease
-HIV infection on drug therapy
-anemia from chemo
-pre-op pt with anemia

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3
Q

epoetin alfa: route

A

SQ

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4
Q

epoetin alfa: FDA recommendations

A

weigh the risks vs benefits
do not initiate therapy if Hgb > 10
use the lowest dose possible to reduce the need for transfusion

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5
Q

epoetin alfa: contraindications

A

chronic kidney disease: increased mortality and serious CV events

cancer: increased mortality and tumor progression

surgery pt: increased thromboembolic events and mortality

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6
Q

epoetin alfa: nursing implications

A

monitor BP before and during therapy (pt can become hypotensive)
monitor Hgb levels
*recommend iron supplements

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7
Q

dietary iron types

A

heme and non-heme iron

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8
Q

heme iron

A

40% of the iron in meat, poultry, and fish
well absorbed

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9
Q

non-heme iron

A

60% of iron in animal tissue
all the iron in plants - fruits, veggies, grains, nuts
not easily absorbed

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10
Q

ferrous sulfate: MOA

A

taken up by bone marrow cells to make hemoglobin

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11
Q

ferrous sulfate: indications

A

iron therapy

for iron deficiency or prevention of

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12
Q

ferrous sulfate: adverse effects

A

GI disturbances, teeth staining, tarry stools

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13
Q

dosage issues with iron therapy

A

ferrous sulfate only contains 20% elemental iron by weight
(ex: if a pt needs 100mg of elemental iron, they will get a 500mg dose)

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14
Q

iron therapy interactions

A

antacids reduce absorption
food helps prevent GI side effects - but decreases absorption by 50-70%

*so take on empty stomach or with SMALL AMT of food, if needed

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15
Q

iron toxicity

A

early signs of OD: N/V/D, stomach pain
*leading cause of poisoning death in children

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16
Q

iron dextran: class/route and indication

A

parenteral iron (IM or IV)

-clear diagnosis of iron deficiency
-oral iron is intolerable or ineffective

17
Q

iron dextran: side effects

A

BLACK BOX WARNING: potentially fatal anaphylaxis (when IV)

18
Q

iron dextran: safety implications

A

only use when ABSOLUTELY necessary
have epipen and CPR equipment readily available
small test dose before a full dose

19
Q

disadvantages of giving iron dextran IM

A

persistent pain and discoloration at injection site, tumors, risk of anaphylaxis

20
Q

cyanocobalamin: indication and route

A

(vit B12)
for vitamin B12 deficiency
preferred route: oral (can also be given intranasally)

21
Q

cyanocobalamin: side effects

A

hypokalemia (natural response of increased RBC production)

22
Q

when taking cyanocobalamin, what should you be cautious of?

A

folic acid - it will correct anemia but masks a B12 deficiency

23
Q

folic acid: MOA

A

converts to the active form of folic acid after administration

24
Q

folic acid: indications

A

treatment of folic acid deficiency anemia
prophylaxis of folate deficiency
initial treatment of severe anemia from vitamin B12 deficiency

25
Q

adverse effects of folic acid

A

none
pt may feel flushed