Medicines & Therapeutics in OM Flashcards
carbamazepine
carbamazepine decreases neuronal excitability or enhances inhibition by altering sodium, potassium or calcium conductance or by affecting the δ-aminobutiric acid (GABA), glutamate or other neurotransmitters that may be concerned in seizure activity
used to treat epilepsy, trigeminal neuralgia, peripheral neuropathy in diabetes
licenced medicines
proven in evidence to the MHRA to have efficacy & safety at defined doses in a child and/or adult population when treating specified medical conditions
usually clinical trial data provided by the manufacturer
post licence surveillance via MHRA
unlicenced medicines
not have evidence of efficacy submitted for condition under tx
will be ‘licenced’ but for another condition & is used at discretion of treating physician
pt must be informed that it is ‘off licence’ and pt must be given PIL specific to condition under tx
drug manufacturer supplied PIL will be for the licenced condition
unlicenced topical steroids
betamethasone mouthwash
beclomethasone metered dose inhaler
both used for treating aphthous ulcers & lichen planus
PIL
pt information leaflet
medical devices that inc ‘dry mouth’ tx
salivix pastilles
saliva orthana
biotene oral balance
artificial saliva dpf
glandosane
what must be considered when prescribing
clinical indication
licenced or unlicensed for this use
dose & route of admin
important warnings for pt
drug interactions & caution
tx duration & monitoring
what must be on a prescription
pt name address age
pt identifier i.e. DoB/CHI
no of days tx
drug to be prescribed
drug formulation & dosage
instructions on quantity to be dispensed
instructions to be given to pt
signed - identifier of prescriber
prescription validity
6mths from date issued
more than 1 item on script
more than one repeated dispensing occasion
advantages of written instructions
stressed pt may not remember instructions
language issues may prevent proper understanding
contact no for pt if issues
legal protection if post tx course questioned
advice to be given to pt
take drugs at correct time & finish course
unexpected reactions: stop & contact prescriber
known side effects should be discussed e.g. metronidazole & alcohol
keep medicine safe & out of reach of children
legal requirement for dentist
to sign prescription as this confirms all other information is correct and has been checked
non steroid topical tx of oral mucosal lesions
CHX mouthwash
benzdamine mouthwash/spray
OTC remedies i.e. igloo, listerine, bonjela
anything else that pt finds helpful (that is not harmful)
steroid based topical tx of oral mucosal lesions
hydrocortisone mucoadhesive pellet
betamethasone mouthwash
beclomethasone metred dose inhaler
betamethasone prescription
unlicenced product so supply PIL
use betnesol tabs 0.5mg:
2 tablets (1mg) with 10ml of water 2mins rinsing 2x daily
refrain from eating / drinking for 30mins after use
do not swallow
do not rinse after use