deck_5865468 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 3 major classes of anti-inflammatory drugs?

A
  • nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
  • glycocorticoids
  • DMARDs (disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs)
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2
Q

what is the mechanism of NSAIDs?

A

inhibit cyclooxygenase enzymes

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3
Q

what is the mechanism of glucocorticoids?

A

inhibit phospholipase A2(PLA2)

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4
Q

what are the two typesof DMARDs?

A
  • traditional (non-biologic) DMARDs

* biologic DMARDs

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5
Q

what are eicosanoids?

A
  • oxygenation products of poly-unsaturated long chain fatty acids
  • G-coupled proteins
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6
Q

eicosanoids act in ___ and/or ___ fashions

A

autocrine and/or paracrine

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7
Q

what are prostanoids?

A

subclassification of eicosanoids

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8
Q

which 3 drugs are prostanoids?

A
  • prostaglandins
  • thromboxanes
  • prostacyclins
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9
Q

prostanoids have major biological effects on what 5 things?

A
  • smooth muscle
  • platelets and blood cells
  • nerve terminals
  • endocrine organs
  • adipose tissue
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10
Q

which drugs do not inhibit platelet aggregation or cause GI upset/ulceration?

A

COX-2 selective inhibitors

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11
Q

what are 3 common NSAIDs?

A

aspirin, ibuprofen, and naproxen

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12
Q

aspirin is also known as ___

A

acetylsalicylic acid

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13
Q

the following are contraindications for which drug?avoid in patients with NSAID allergies, renal insufficiency, gout, hemophilia or other bleeding disorders, taking blood thinners, ACE inhibitors, methotrexate or oral hypoglycemic drugs, within 10 days of surgery, or near term pregnancyavoid in children with viral-induced illness (Reye syndrome)

A

aspirin

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14
Q

___ is antipyretic and algesic (600-1000mg/day) and anti-inflammatory (3.2-4g/day)

A

aspirin

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15
Q

describe aspirins inhibition of COX enzymes

A

nonselective COX-1 and COX-2 inhibition

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16
Q

___ is the only NSAID to inhibit both COXs in an irreversible manner

A

aspirin (ASA)

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17
Q

___ is valued primarily for its antiplatelet aggregation effects at either 81mg/day or 325mg every other day

A

aspirin (ASA)

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18
Q

ibuprofen is an NSAID derivative of ___

A

propionic acid

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19
Q

___ is antipyretic and analgesic (doses <2400mg/day) and anti-inflammatory (doses >2400mg/day)

A

ibuprofen

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20
Q

if taken together, ibuprofen interferes with the ___ effect of low-dose aspirin, rendering aspirin less effective for ___ and ___

A
  • antiplatelet

* MI and stroke prevention

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21
Q

___ is an NSAID with similar pharmacological profile as other NSAIDs but is available in slow-release formulation

A

naproxenaka aleve

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22
Q

what are the main adverse effects common to all NSAIDs?

A

CNS, cardiovascular, GI, hematologic, hepatic, pulmonary, skin, renal, reye syndrome

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23
Q

describe adverse effects on the GI common to all NSAIDs

A

abdominal pain, dysplasia, nausea, vomiting, ulcers, or bleeding

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24
Q

describe reye syndrome that is an adverse effect common to all NSAIDs

A

rapidly progressive encephalopathy which occurs after recovery from viral infectionscommon in children taking salicylates after viral-induced illness

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25
Q

celexocib (celebrex) is a ___ inhibitor

A

COX-2 selective

26
Q

celecoxib (celebrex) has ___, ___, and ___ effects that are similar to aspirin

A

analgesic, antipyretic, and anti-inflammatory

27
Q

celecoxib (celebrex) has no effect on ___

A

platelet aggregation

28
Q

___ is 10-20x more selective for COX-2 than COX-1. what is the significance?

A
  • celecoxib (celebrex)
  • significantly fewer GI adverse effects, no cardiorotective effects, and increase risk of edema, hypertension, myocardial infarction, and stroke
29
Q

acetaminophen is known as a ___ pain reliever

A

non-aspirin

30
Q

___ relieves fever, headaches, and other mild-moderate aches and pain

A

acetominophen

31
Q

is acetominophen anti-inflammatory?

A

notherefore it is NOT an NSAID

32
Q

___ can be used as an alternative to NSAIDs in patients that have allergies, stomach ulcers, bleeding problems, or are taking prescription “blood thinners” like warfarin

A

acetominophen

33
Q

the following are adverse effects of which drug?rash, chest pain, bone marrow suppressionshould be avoided in patients with liver disease or insufficiency due to alcoholism

A

acetaminophen

34
Q

acetaminophen overdose results in ___

A

hepatotoxicity over days/weeks→ liver failure→ death

35
Q

___ are steroid hormones

A

glucocorticoids

36
Q

what is the mechanism of glucocorticoids?

A

prevents conversion of membrane phospholipids to arachidonic acid by inhibiting the phospholipase A2 enzyme

37
Q

glucocorticoids decrease ___

A

inflammation

38
Q

what are the 3 short- to medium-acting glucocorticoids?

A

hydrocortisone, cortisone, perdnisone

39
Q

what is the long-acting glucocorticoid?

A

dexamethasone

40
Q

___ is a synthetic short- to medium-acting glucocorticoid effective as an immunosuppressant drug once converted via hepatic metabolism to its active metabolite, ___

A
  • prednisone

* prednisolone

41
Q

what is the mechanism of action of prednisone?

A

blocks phospholipase A2, thus shuts down immune responses

42
Q

___ are NSAIDs and GCs (glucocorticoids), which primarily alleviate the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis only

A

non-biolic DMARDs (small molecules)

43
Q

how can DMARDs suppress the progression of rheumatoid arthritis?

A

through their actions against the underlying immunological abnormalities

44
Q

what are 2 important non-biologic DMARDs?

A

methotrexate and azathioprine

45
Q

___ is the first line DMARD for rheumatoid arthritis

A

methotrexate

46
Q

what is the mechanism of methotrexate?

A

inhibits transformylase and thymidylate synthetase enzymes

47
Q

the following are the clinical uses for which drug?rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile chronic arthritis, psoriasis, systemic lupus erythromatosis, and vasculitis

A

methotrexate

48
Q

which drug has the following adverse effects?nausea and mucosal ulcers most common; leukopenia, anemia, GI ulcers, alopecia, stomatitis, hepatotoxicity, and lung damage

A

methotrexate

49
Q

the risk of serious, life-threatening adverse effects is increased if ___ is taken with NSAIDs such as aspirin, naproxen, or other salicylates

A

methotrexate (DMARD)

50
Q

methotrexate is contraindicated in ___

A

pregnancy

51
Q

the following mechanism describes what drug?prodrug that acts through its main metabolite, 6-thioguanine, to strongly suppress DNA synthesis and production of rapidly proliferating cells like B-cell and T-cell function, immunoglobulin production, and IL-2 secretion

A

azathioprine (imuran), a DMARD

52
Q

which drug has the following clinical uses?approved for rheumatoid arthritis, kidney transplant rejection prophylaxis, crohn’s disease, SLE, and scleroderma

A

azathioprine (imuran), a DMARD

53
Q

the following are adverse effects of which drug?bone marrow suppression, GI upset, inreased risk of infection, increased risk of lymphomas in humans, rare allergic reactions

A

azathioprine (imuran), a DMARD

54
Q

what are biologic DMARDs?

A
  • large molecules proteins produced by recombinant DNA technology
  • T-cell modulators
  • TNF-alpha blocking agents
55
Q

what is the mechanism of abatacept (orencia)?

A

acts as a fusion protein to prevent activation of T-cells

56
Q

the following are clinical uses of which drug?FDA approved for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis in patients who have failed or are inadequately responding to anti-TNF-alpha therapy

A

abatacept (orencia)

57
Q

the following are adverse effects of which drug?increased risk of lymphomas, infections, congestive heart failure, demyelinating disease, a lupus-like syndrome, induction of auto-antibodies, and infection site reactions

A

abatacept (orencia)

58
Q

what is the monthly cost of abatacept (orencia)?

A

$3500-$3800 (like other biological drugs of its class)

59
Q

what is the mechanism of adalimumab (humira)?

A

it is a biologic DMARD that prevents ligand from binding to TNF-alpha receptor

60
Q

which drug has the follwoing clinical uses?rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis, and refractory asthma

A

adalimumab (humira)

61
Q

the following adverse effects describe what drug?increased risk of lymphomas, infections (especially reactivation of latent tuberculosis), congestive heart failure, demyelinating disease, a lupus-like syndrome, induction of auto-antibodies, and infection site reactions

A

adalimumab (humira)