NSAIDS Flashcards
1
Q
What are the main effects of NSAIDs?
A
- analgesia
- anti-Pyretic
- anti-inflammatory
2
Q
Selective COX-2 inhibitors (celecoxib and etoricoxib)
A
- intention: to avoid inhibition of homeostatic actions mediated by COX-1
- less inhibitory on COX-1 but selectivity for COX-2 varies among drugs
- less GI ADRs
- renal ADRs similar to non-selective
- no antiplatelet action but impairs PGI2 which can potentially lead to unopposed aggregators effects
- some evidence of less analgesic effect
- can be useful when monitored in severe osteo and rheumatoid arthritis
3
Q
What are the considerations and indications for NSAID use?
A
Considerations
- CVS disease risk
- Renal function (age)
- GI disease (previous use of NSAIDs)
- DDIs (ACEi and ARBs, diuretics, SU, methotrexate, warfarin)
- level of pain, pyrexia, level of inflammtion
Indications
- inflammatory conditions: joint and soft tissue
- OA: topical NSAID and paracetamol should be tried first
- postoperative pain
- topical use on cornea
- menorrhagia (moderate reduction in blood loss)
- low dose aspirin for platelet aggregation inhibition
- opioid sparing when used in combination
- cancer reduction by up to 30-50% nuclear transcriiption factors, reduced cell proliferation, inflammation
4
Q
Paracetamol
A
- non-NSAID, non-opioid analgesic with antipyretic action
- from mild to moderate analgesia and fever
- generally well tolerated at therapeutic doses with fewer common ADRs, no effect on platelets and limited effect on GU
- mechanism still not COMPLETELY known
- COX-2 selective inhibition in CNS (decreases pain signals in higher centres)
- peroxidases in peripheral inflammation inhibit the paracetamol so little anti-inflammatory action
- well absorbed from GI
- but predominantly inactivated by conjugation in the liver
5
Q
NAPQI
A
- highly reactive metabolite with some analgesic effect
- at normal therapeutic doses, conjugation with glutathione makes it harmless
- hepatic glutathione is limited
- NAPQI is highly nucleophilic and can ultimately cause cell death
- 150mg/kg sufficient to cause irreversible damage
6
Q
What to do in a paracetamol overdose?
A
- N-acetylcysteine
- can be asymptomatic for many hours
- nausea, vomiting, abd pain in the first 24hours
- maximal liver damage in 3 to 4 days
- give glutathione theology replacement: IV acetylcysteine which will reduce the amount of toxic NAPQI
- do not give glutathione directly because it doesnt absorb into the hepatocytes
- need to give N-acetylcysteine to act on phase 2 metabolism