Medications Flashcards

1
Q

Name one example of a mild topical corticosteroid (be specific)

A

Hydrocortisone 0.5%-1%
DERMAID

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2
Q

Name one example of a moderate topical corticosteroid (be specific)

A

Methylprednisolone aceponate 0.1%
ADVANTAN

OR

Betamethasone valerate 0.02-0.05%
ANTROQUORIL, CELESTONE-M

OR

Triamcinolone acetonide 0.02-0.05%
TRICORTONE, ARISTOCORT

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3
Q

Name one example of a potent topical corticosteroid (be specific)

A

Betamethasone diproprionate 0.05%
ELUPHRAT, DIPROSONE

OR

Betamethasone valerate 0.05-0.1%
BETNOVATE

OR

Mometasone furoate 0.1%
ELOCON, NOVASONE

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4
Q

Name one example of a very potent topical corticosteroid (be specific)

A

Betamethasone diproprionate 0.05% in optimised vehicle
ELEUPHRAT OV, DIPROSONE OV

OR

Clobetasone proprionate 0.05%
CLOBEX

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5
Q

Give some examples of potential side effects of topical steroids

A
  • Skin atrophy
  • Systemic adverse effects
  • Stretch marks in armpits or groin area
  • Enlarged or broken capillaries (Telangiectasia)
  • Easy bruising of the skin
  • Localised increased hair thickness and length
  • Acne like changes
  • Colour change in skin
  • Periorificial dermatitis
  • Steroid rosacea
  • Pustular psoriasis
  • Rare: glaucoma, cushing, growth retardation (unlikely from topical use)
  • Red skin syndrome (rare reaction from inappropriate steroid use)
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6
Q

For topical corticosteroids, what formulation is best when?

A

Ointments for dry, scaling rashes (occlusive effect) or mucocutaneous lesions

Creams for wet/oozing lesions

Lotions for hairy areas

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7
Q

Renin-angiotensin system inhibitor AEs

A

Hypotension (more common in elderly)

Hyperkalaemia (increases with renal impairment)

AKI (caution when dehydrated)

Drug interactions (NSAIDs, diuretics, SGLT2i)

Cough

Allergy (angioedema)

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8
Q

What medications may need to be withheld in CKD when unwell?

A

SADMANS
- sulfonylureas (reduced clearance -> ↑ AEs)
- ACEi
- diuretics
- metformin (reduced clearance -> ↑ AEs)
- ARBs
- NSAIDs
- SGLT2i

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9
Q

Signs of lithium toxicity

A

N&V + diarrhoea
tremor, hyper-reflexia, ataxia, dysarthria
prolonged QT, hypotension

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10
Q

Signs of serotonin toxicity

A

hyper-reflexia, clonus, shivering, tremor, hypertonia, rigidity
hyperthermia, sweating, flushing, mydriasis, tachycardia
agitation, anxiety, confusion, altered consciousness

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11
Q

AEs of SSRIs, SNRIs and TCAs

A

SSRIs - headache, GI upset, sexual dysfunction, hyponatraemia, transient suicidality in young people

SNRIs - as above + HTN

TCAs - anticholinergic Sx (dry mouth, tremor) + cardiac (hypotension, tachycardia, prolonged QT)

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12
Q

Common AEs of anti-psychotics

A

weight gain, dyslipidaemia, hyperglycaemia, hypertension
+ EPSEs eg. dystonia, Parkinsonism, tardive dyskinesia

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13
Q

Life threatening AE of anti-psychotic

A

Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
1. EPSEs = lead-pipe rigidity, bradykinesia/akinesia, dystonia, dysphagia, tremor
2. Hyperthermia
3. Autonomic Sx = tachycardia, HTN, labile BP, sweating, tachypnoea
4. CNS Sx = drowsiness, confusion, coma

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14
Q

Patient instructions for administering their thyroid hormone replacement

A

Take on an empty stomach with water, 30-60mins before food

Do not take with calcium or iron supplements

Ensure medication is stored correctly (ie. in the fridge if required)

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15
Q

4 medications for long-term management of ischaemic heart disease

A
  1. Aspirin
  2. Statin
  3. B-blocker (non-dihydropyridine CCB if BB CI)
  4. ACEi
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16
Q

Triple therapy for HFrEF

A
  1. ACEi > ARB
  2. B-blocker (HF specific - carvedilol, bisoprolol, nebivolol or metoprolol XL)
  3. Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (spironolactone)

+ SGLT2i if criteria met