Chapter 7 - Medicines and Pharmacology Flashcards

2
Q

Requirement for skin absorption?

A

Lipid solubility through the epidermis

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3
Q

Requirement for CSF absorption?

A

Nonionized, lipid-soluble drugs

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4
Q

Sulfonamides will do what in newborns?

A

Displace unconjugated bilirubin

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5
Q

What is 0 order kinetics?

A

Constant amount of drug is eliminated regardless of dose

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6
Q

What is 1st order kinetics?

A

Drug eliminated proportional to dose

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7
Q

How many half-lives for a drug to reach steady state?

A

5

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8
Q

Where are tetracycline and heavy metals stored?

A

In bone

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9
Q

Volume of distribution is equal to what?

A

Amnt of drug in the body divided by amnt of drug in plasma or blood

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10
Q

High volume of distribution means what?

A

Higher concentrations in the extravascular compartment compared with intravascular concentrations

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11
Q

What is bioavailability?

A

Fraction of unchanged drug reaching the systemic circulation; 100% for IV drugs

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12
Q

What is ED50?

A

Drug level at which desired effect occurs in 50% of patients

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13
Q

What is LD50?

A

Drug level at which death occurs in 50% of patients

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14
Q

What is tachyphylaxis?

A

Tolerance after only a few doses

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15
Q

What is potency?

A

Dose required for effect

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16
Q

What is efficacy?

A

Ability to achieve result without untoward effect

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17
Q

What is Phase I of microsomal drug metabolism?

A

Demethylation, oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis reaction (requries NADPH/O2)

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18
Q

What is Phase II of microsomal drug metabolism?

A

Glucuronic acid (#1) and sulfates attached (forms water-soluble metabolite)

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19
Q

Inhibitors of P-450?

A

Cimetidine, isoniazid, ketoconazole, erythromycin, Cipro, Flagyl, allopurinol, verapamil, amiodarone, MAOIs, disulfiram

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20
Q

Inducers of P-450?

A

Cruciform vegetables, ETOH, insecticides, cigarette smoke, phenobarbital, dilantin, theophylline, warfarin

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21
Q

Most important organ for eliminating most drugs?

22
Q

How are polar (ionized) drugs eliminated?

A

More water soluble, more likely to be eliminated in unaltered form

23
Q

How are nonpolar (nonionized) drugs eliminated?

A

More fat soluble, more likely to be metabolized before excretion

24
Q

What causes gout?

A

Uric acid buildup; end product of purine metabolism

25
Q

Colchicine MOA?

A

Anti-inflammatory; binds tubulin, inhibits migration

26
Allopurinol MOA?
Xanthine oxidase inhibitor, blocks uric acid formation from xanthine
27
Probenecid MOA?
Increases renal secretion of uric acid
28
Side effect of cholestyramine?
Can bind Vit K and cause bleeding tendency
29
Side effect of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors?
Liver dysfunction, rhabdo
30
Side effect of niacin?
Flushing (Tx: ASA)
31
Side effect of promethazine?
Tardive dyskinesia (inhibits dopamine receptors); Tx: Benadryl
32
Metoclopramide MOA?
Dopamine receptor blocker, used to increase gastric/gut motility
33
Ondansetron MOA?
Serotonin receptor inhibitor
34
Digoxin MOA?
Inhibits Na/K ATPase and increases myocardial calcium; increases atrial contraction rate but slows AV conduction
35
Side effects of digoxin?
Decreased blood flow to intestines, has been implicated in causing mesenteric ischemia; hypokalemia, increases sensitivity of heart to digitalis causing arrhythmias/AV block; visual changes (yellow hue), fatigue
36
Side effects of procainamide?
Lupus-like syndrome, pulmonary fibrosis, torsades (follow drug levels and QT intervals, torsades treated w/ Mg2+)
37
Adenoside MOA?
Transient interruption of the AV node
38
What is the best single agent shown to reduce mortality in pts with CHF?
ACE-I
39
When can ACE-I precipitate renal failure?
In pts with renal artery stenosis
40
What medication can reduce the risk of MI and a fib post-op?
Beta-blockers
41
Atropine MOA?
ACh antagonist; increases heart rate
42
Leuprolide MOA?
Analogue of GnRH and LHRH; inhibits release of LH and FSH from pituitary when given continuously (paradoxic effect)
43
Vasopressin MOA?
Acts on V-1 receptors found on vascular smooth muscle causing constriction
44
Indomethacin MOA and uses?
Inhibits prostaglandin production; used to close PDA in children and used in pts with gout
45
Misoprostol MOA and uses?
PGE1 derivative; protective prostaglandin used to prevent PUD
46
Mechanism of ulcer formation in patients on NSAIDs?
Inhibits prostaglandin synthesis and leads to decreased mucus and HCO3- secretion and increases acid production
47
Haldol side effect?
Extrapyramidal manifestations
48
Symptoms of ASA poisoning?
Tinnitus, headaches, nausea, vomiting; 1st respiratory alkalosis, 2nd metabolic acidosis
49
Side effect of gadolinium?
Nausea