Chapter 76 - NSAIDs Flashcards

1
Q

Are COX-1–induced prostaglandins constitutive or induced ?

And COX-2?

A

COX-1: BOTH - most are constitutive, but some are also produced in response to tissue injury.
COX-2: BOTH - many are inducible, but constitutive COX-2 prostaglandins found in the brain, intestine, and kidneys in many species

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2
Q

Which are COX-2 selective, which are dual-acting (COX 1 and 2), which are COX-3 selective?

  • Aspirin
  • Carprofen
  • Meloxicam
  • Firocoxib
  • Acetaminophen
A
  • Aspirin : dual-acting
  • Carprofen: COX-2 selective
  • Meloxicam: COX-2 selective
  • Firocoxib: COX-2 selective
  • Acetaminophen: COX-3 selective (COX-3 has been isolated in dog’s brain, inflammatory and pyretic effects)
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3
Q

What are the digestive protective effects of COX-induced PG ?

A
  • COX-1 induced PG increase gastric mucous production and local blood flow,
  • COX-2 is stimulated when there is intestinal mucosal damage - produces PG important for mucosal healing
  • 1 and 2 - induced PG regulate GI motility
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4
Q

Which is the NSAID that has the least GI side effects when used long term in dogs:

  • meloxicam
  • ketoprofen
  • carprofen
  • flunixin meglumine
  • etodolac
A

Carprofen

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5
Q

What is the solubility of NSAIDs in stomach acidity? What is the consequence?

A
  • Lipid soluble (weak acids)
  • Penetrate easily into gastric cells, where they become trapped in the relatively more alkaline environment.
    => high local concentration of NSAIDs in the gastric mucosa
    => might be why adverse effects in gastrointestinal system at lower doses than in other organ systems
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6
Q

How do you treat a non-symptomatic NSAIDs toxicity? Treatment duration? What is an early sign of renal toxicity to monitor?

A
  • Induction of emesis if within 2 to 4 hours of ingestion.
  • Activated charcoal: many NSAIDs undergo enterohepatic recycling => repeated dosing every 4 to 6 hours
  • Intravenous fluid therapy: vital to maintain intestinal and renal perfusion
  • Gastrointestinal protectants: prevent or treat gastric mucosal injury
  • Treatment duration: until at least three halflives have passed - however, NSAIDs can have a longer half-life in the tissues than in the plasma, so treatment should continue if there is laboratory or clinical abnormalities
  • Urine sediment: monitor daily (even in asymptomatic animals), to look for evidence of renal casts (tubular injury)
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7
Q

A dog is presented to you for having stolen NSAIDS from their owner. The owner was not home and the ingestion happened between 2 and 8 hours from now. The patient vomited 3 times and had diarrhea on the sofa, motivating the owner to come to the ER.
Do you induce vomiting ? Do you give activated charcoal?

A

No. If patients are showing clinical signs of NSAID toxicity, then decontamination procedures such as emesis or activated charcoal are not beneficial because the medication will already have been absorbed.

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8
Q

By which mechanism can NSAIDs cause kidney damage when administered to an hypovolemic paient?

A
  • Prostaglandin-mediated effect of local vasodilation is diminished or lost
  • COX-2–selective medications can increase the relative production of thromboxanes, which have local vasoconstrictive effects
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