NSAIDs Flashcards
What is the MOA, actions, and uses of NSAIDs?
MOA: inhibition of cyclooxygenase which leads to inhibition of synthesis of prostaglandins and thromboxanes
Actions: anti-inflammatory, analgesic, antipyretic
Uses: mild-moderate pain especially pain of inflammation; musculoskeletal disorders, RA, OA, gout, ankylosing spondylitis, dysmenorrhea; aspirin 50% decrease risk of colon cancer; niacin induces flushing
What are the nonselective COX inhibitors?
- Aspirin: irreversible
- Diclofenac
- Ibuprofen
- Indomethacin: DOC closure of ductus arteriosus
- Ketorolac
- Naproxen
- Piroxicam
What are the COX-2 selective inhibitors?
- Celecoxib
- Meloxicam: not as selective for COX-2
- Rofecoxib and Valdecoxib: withdrawn bc of thrombotic events
What are the AE of NSAIDs
- GI effects
- Cardiovascular effects
- Renal effects: decreased renal blood flow, analgesic nephropathy (phenacetin)
- NSAID-Exacerbated Respiratory Disease (NERD): vasomotor rhinitis, angioedema, urticaria, bronchial asthma, laryngeal edema, bronchoconstriction, flushing, hypotension, shock; from diversion of arachidonate to increase leukotrienes
What can be done for GI AE caused by NSAIDs and what are the risk of each drug?
Misoprostol (PGE1 analog), PPIs, H2 blockers
- Lowest Risk: Celecoxib
- Low Risk: Ibuprofen, Aspirin, Diclofenac
- Medium Risk: Naproxen, Indomethacin
- High Risk: Piroxicam
How do NSAIDs increase the risk of cardiovascular events?
- Upsetting the balance between TXA2 and PGI2 > vasoconstriction, platelet aggregation, thrombosis
- More COX-2 selective the more CV risk
What are the CI, DI of NSAIDs and explain the triple whammy?
- CI: Reye’s syndrome in children and young adults less than 20 with fever associated with viral illness; pregnancy
- ACE-inhibitors, corticosteroids (increased risk of GI ulcers), warfarin (bleeding risk)
- The triple whammy is acute renal failure from combination of an ACE inhibitor or ARB, diuretic, and NSAID
What is the actions of aspirins and other salicylates?
- Respiratory actions: elevated CO2 and increased respiration with higher doses stimulate hyperventilation and toxic levels causes central respiratory paralysis
- Increased risk of bleeding cause of irreversibly inhibits TXA2
- Anti-uricosuric effects because aspirin competes with uric acid for secretions
- Heptic injury in high doses
- Salicylism: mild chornic salicylate intoxication (salicylism) > HA, dizziness, tinnitus, mental confusion, hyperventilation
What are the uses of aspirin?
- mild-moderate pain
- RA and other inflammatory joint conditions
- Potent antipyretic
- Low doses are cardioprotective
Acetaminophen MOA, uses, AE
MOA: analgesic and antipyretic
Uses: mild-moderate pain; DOC OA, DOC children with fever and flu like syndrome, DOC short term tx of fever and inor pain during pregnancy
AE: hepatotoxin in overdose (acetylcysteine can be used)