Anticoagulants and Antiplatelets/Thrombolytics Flashcards
Heparin MOA.
FAST: Complexes with antithrobmin and irreversibly inactivates thrombin and factor Xa
Warfarin MOA.
SLOW: inhibits vitamin K poxide reductase and interferes with addition of gamma-carboxy glutamic acid to 2, 7, 9, 10 and Protein C and S (so they are not produced correctly)
Danaproid (LMWH) MOA.
heparinoid that has selective anti-factor X activity
Hirudin MOA.
direct thrombin inhibitor
Lepirudin MOA.
(IV) binds to thrombin’s active site/ thrombin substrate and inhibits enzymatic action
Argatroban MOA.
direct thrombin inhibitor that binds directly to thrombin-active site with short half life
Dabigatran MOA.
(Oral) binds to thrombin’s active site and inhibits enzymation action
Aspirin MOA.
Non-selective, irreversible COX innhibitor–
COX1: reduces platelet producaiton of TXA2, so no stimulation of platelet aggregation
COX2: prevents synthesis of PGI2, so no increase in cAMP to decrease platelet activity)
Dypyridamole MOA.
inhibits adenosine uptake and inhibits phosphodiesterase enzymes that degrade cAMP and cGMP (so no platelet activation)
Prostacyclin MOA.
.
Clopidogrel MOA.
prodrug CYP2C19: active metabolite irreversibly inhibits platelet ADP receptor (so no expression of GPIIb/IIIa for aggregation)
Prasugrel MOA.
prodrug CYP3A4/2B6: better than clopidogrel (inhibits ADP receptor) with higher bleeding risk
Eptifibidate MOA.
reversible GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors that are smaller than abciximab (prevent binding of fibrinogen and vWF)
Abciximab MOA.
Inhibits platelet aggregation by interfering with GPIIb/IIIa binding to fibrinogen and other ligands
Streptokinase MOA.
bacterial protein that forms complex with plasminogen that converts it rapidly to plasmin
Urokinase MOA.
human enzyme synthesized by the kidney that directly converts plasminogen to active plasmin.