Drug errors Flashcards

1
Q

Why do you have to consider clearance of opiates?

A

Some are hepatically cleared and some renally

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2
Q

When. should you not prescribe morphine

A

Renal failure

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3
Q

Anticoagulant errors

A
  • Warfarin is hepatically metabolised and has lots of interactions - clarithromycin
  • Use bridging
  • LMWH (longer half life - consider when pt is going into surgery and needs 18h window before spinal surgery) vs unfractionated (constant infusion, short half life)
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4
Q

Methalazine and modified release

A

releases at different pH so works in different areas of bowel

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5
Q

What are the shells of capsules made from?

A

Lactose

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6
Q

Loperamide interactions

A

controls diarrhoea but can cause nausea - metoclopramide is a pro-kinetic which speeds gut up and is therefore inappropriate but cyclizine works in a similar manner

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7
Q

CYP interactions

A

slowed down by clarithromycin and gentamicin - this In turn increases the concentration of other drugs

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8
Q

Sodium valproate interactions

A

interacts with imeropenin - renders both useless because it speeds up metabolism

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9
Q

erythromycin side effects

A

Long QT

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10
Q

Glucosamine side effect

A

Anti-coagulant but used for joint pain

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