L22- GIT Drugs I (PPIs) Flashcards
PPIs in terms of strength of gastric acid suppression in comparison to other drugs (quantifiable)
most potent inhibitor –> inhibits 90-98% of 24hr secretion
PPIs MOA
irreversibly binds / inhibits H+/K+ ATPase on parietal cells (common pathway for all stimulators of secretion –> therefore most potent inhibitor)
PPI effect on basal and meal-time gastric acid secretion
very strong inhibition of both
list the PPIs
- omeprazole
- esomeprazole
- lansoprazole
- rabeprazole
- pantoprazole
list the indications of PPI use (hint- many)
- patients who failed H2RA po bid therapy
- severe GERD
- PUD: H. pylori eradication, NSAID injury, prevent rebleeding
- gastroma
- non-ulcer dyspepsia
- prophylaxis against stress related gastritis
describe the general adverse effects of PPIs
(generally safe)
-<5%: diarrhea, abdominal pain, HA
list the adverse effects with some association with PPI use
- B12 deficiency (reduced pepsin function)
- inc in CA-pneumonias and C. diff. colitis (inc pH –> inc pathogen survival)
- hypomagnesemia
- osteopenia –> fractures (reduced Ca absorption OR osteoclast inhibition)
list the main additional adverse effect from omeprazole
CYP450 inhibitor:
-inc concentration of Warfarin, Diazepam, Phenytoin
Some PPIs, (1), will inhibit CYP2C19, which has the function of activating (2) prodrug, therefore (3) drugs are preferred.
(note this is a theory, not many reports from patients of this intolerance)
1- omeprazole, esomeprazole, lansoprazole
2- clopidogrel
3- pantoprazole, rabeprazole