Cardiology--Pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

What are some dihydropyridine CCBs?

A

amlodipine, nimodipine, nifedipine

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2
Q

What are some non-DHPR CCBs?

A

diltiazem, verapamil

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3
Q

greater effects on vascular smooth muscle?

A

amlodipine =nifedipine

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4
Q

greater effects on heart?

A

verapamil > diltiazem > amlodipine

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5
Q

subarachnoid hemorrhage

A

use nimodipine to prevent vasospasm

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6
Q

CCBs side effects?

A

cardiac depression, AV block, peripheral edema, flushing, dizziness, hyperprolactinemia, constipation

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7
Q

hydralazine moA?

A

increases cGMP–>smooth muscle relaxation, vasodilates arterioles > veins, afterload reduction

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8
Q

first line use for HTN in pregancy

A

hydralazine with methyldopa

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9
Q

what should be co-administered with hydralazine?

A

a beta blocker to prevent reflex tachycardia

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10
Q

hydralazine SEs?

A

reflex tachy, fluid retention, lupus like syndrome

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11
Q

nitroprusside moa?

A

short acting, increases cGMP via direct release of NO, can cause cyanid toxicity

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12
Q

fenoldopam moa?

A

D1 receptor agonist–>coronary, peripheral, renal, splanchnic vasodilation, decreases BP and increases natriuresis

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13
Q

nitroglycerin, isosorbide dinitrate moa

A

vasodilates by increasing NO in vascular smooth muscle, increase in cGMP and smooth muscle relaxation–>Dilates veins&raquo_space;> arteries, decrease preload

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14
Q

b blockers contraindicated in angina?

A

pindolol and acebutolol–partial B agonists

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15
Q

statin effects on lipids?

A

— LDL, + HDL, - TGs

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16
Q

Niacin (B3) effects on lipids?

A

– LDL, ++HDL, - TGs

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17
Q

Bile acid resins lipid effect?

A

– LDL, slightly increase HDL/TGs

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18
Q

ezetimibe lipid effect?

A

– LDL, no effect on other lipids,

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19
Q

Fibrates lipid effect?

A
  • LDL, + HDL, —TGs
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20
Q

lipid lowering agent combos that cause rhabdomyolysis?

A

statin + fibrate; statin + niacin

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21
Q

hepatotoxic lipid lowering agents?

A

statains and fibrates, ezetimibe

22
Q

red flushed face, hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia

A

Niacin, decrease flushing by aspirin, possibly a prostaglandin mediated effect

23
Q

decrease absorbtion of fat soluble vitamins, lipid lowering agent

A

bile acid resins

24
Q

lipid lowering agent that causes cholesterol gall stones

A

fibrates, esp in conjunction with bile acid resins

25
niacin moa?
inhibits lipolysis in adipose tissue; reduces hepatic VLDL synthess
26
fibrate moa?
upregulate LPL-->increase TG clearance, activates PPAR-alpha to induce HDL synthesis
27
digoxin toxicity?
cholinergic, eKG: increased PR, decreased QT, ST scooping, T wave inversion, arrhythmia, AV block; hyperkalemia--poor prognosis;
28
factors predisposing to digoxin tox?
renal failure, hypokalemia (permissive for digoxin binding to Na/K ATPase K+ binding site); verapamil, amiodarone, quinidine (decreases clearance)
29
Class IA antiarrythmics? Moa?
quinidine, procainable, disopyramide; block Na channels, affects phase 0 depolarization and phase 3 repolarization-->increased AP duration, increased effective refractory period, increases QT interval
30
Class IA use?
both atrial and ventricular arrythmias esp re-entrant and ectopic SVT and VT (like WPW)
31
Class IA sideeffects?
cinchonism (headache, tinnitus) with quinidine, reversible SLE like syndrome with procainamide, heart failure with disopyramide, thrombocytopenia, torsades de pointes due to prolonged QT
32
General rules for Class I antiarrhythmics?
All are Na channel blockers. all decrease slope of phase 0 depolarization and increased firing threshold in abnormal pacemaker cells. State dependent. Hyperkalemia increases tox for all class I drugs.
33
class IB antiarrythmics? moa?
lidocaine, mexiletine; decrease AP duration, blocks Na in very rapidly depolarizing cells, preferentially affects ischemic/depolarized purkinje and ventricular tissue
34
Class IC antiarrhthymics? moa?
Flecainide, Propafenone; significant prolongs refractory period in AV node, no effect on AP duration
35
Class IC use?
SVTs including afib
36
Class IC tox?
pro-arrhythmic, contraindicated post MI or structural heart disease
37
Class II antiarrhthymics? moa?
B blockers, decrease SA/AV nodal activity by decreasing cAMP/Ca currents. Suppresses abnormal pacemakers by decreasing slope of phase 4; AV node particularly sensitive
38
Class II use?
SVT, slowing ventricular rate in afib/flutter
39
B-blocker tox?
exacerbate COPD/asthma, sedation/sleep alteration, may mask signs of hypoglycemia, metoprolol can cause dyslipidemia, propanolol can exacerbate prinzmetals angina, tx overdose w/ glucagon
40
Class III? moa?
amiodarone, ibutilide, dofetilide, sotalol; blocks K efflux, increases AP length w/out affects Na or Ca-->increases AP duration, prolonged QT; used when other drugs fail
41
class III use?
afib/flutter; VT (amiodarone, sotalol)
42
SEs of sotalol?
torsades de points, excessive B blockade
43
SE of amiodarone? what to always check?
PFTS, LFTs, TFTs; pulmonary fibrosis, liver tox, hyper/po thyroidism, corneal deposits, blue gray skin deposits-->photodermatitis; neurologic effects, constipation, CV effects
44
amiodarone can be in what classes?
class I, 2, 3, and 4 and affects lipid membrane.
45
Class IV antiarrthmics? moa?
CCBs, verapamil, diltiazem; decrease conduction velocity, increase ERP/PR interal
46
Class IV use?
prevention of nodal arrythmias, rate control in afib
47
Class IV SEs?
constipation, flushing, edema
48
adenosine MOA?
increases K flux out of cells-->hyperpolarizing cell and decreaseing Ica
49
adenosine use?
drug of choice in diagnosing/abolishing SVTs, very short half life (15 sec)--can cause hypotension/chest pain
50
Mg2+ use?
torsades de pointes and digoxin tox
51
which classes are nodal blockers?
class II (beta blockers), class IV (CCBs)