Prescribing in the elderly Flashcards
Age related changes
Adults 60-80 years
* Lower percent body weight as water - less fluid reserve
* >20% reduction in lean muscle mass - even with exercise
*35-45% body weight as fat in women - lipophilic drugs will be absorbed/storred in fat, extending half life (benzos, sedatives)
* 36-38% boday weight as fat in men
* lowe serum albumin - meds that bind will albumin will ned a lower dose - coumadin/warfarin
* 20% loss of kidney mass - suseptable to nephrotoxins
* 50% reduction in heapatic blood flow - decreased liver metabolism
Highly protien bound medications
- the lower the albumin the higer the amount of free drug available, increasing the therapudic effect/toxicities
- warfarin
- phentoin (Dilantin)
- Valproic acid (Depakote)
- Diazepam (Vallium
Systemic Anticholinergic effects in elderly
- Dry mouth
- Blurred vision
- Urinary retention (BPH)
- Sedation
- Agitation
- Tachycardia
- Hyperpnea
- Mydrasis
- Flushing
- Psychosis
- Seizure
- Coma
- Hyperthermia
OR
* dry as a bone
* red as a beet
* mad as a hatter
* hot as a hare
* can’t see
* can’t pee
* can’t spit
* can’t shit
ex: diphenhydramine
Commonly used meds used in elderly with systemic anticholinergic effect
meds to treat over active bladder
* oxybutinin - sustained release beeter in elderly
* oxytrol (OTC for women)
antidepressants
* tricyclic antidepressants - avoid amytriptaline, tradazone least anticholinergic
* some SSRIs - avoid Paroxetine, less sedation with sertraline, citalopram or escitalopram (preferred due to lest drug interactions)
QT prolongation
- any drug that prolongs QT will increase risk of torsades de pointes
- the risk of torsades with erythromycin or clarithromycin is greater in females
- Cilaopram (celexa) - dose >40 mg not recomended for all.
Citalopram and QT prolongation
not reccomended with
* congenital long QT, bradycardia,hypokalemia, or hypomagnesemia, recent acute MI, or uncompensated HF
* in pts taking other drugs that prolong QT interval
Do not exceed 20mg/day
* age >60, hepatic impairment, taking tagament, or PPI
In pt with persistent QT measurements exceeding 500ms, discontinue citalopram
Escitalopram is better choice, no drug interactions, or QT prolongation
In elderly choose drugs with shortes half-life and least drug interactions
shortes to longest half life
1. Paroxitine - most anticholenrgic
2. sertraline
3. escitalopram - best option
4. citalopram
5. fluoxetine - very long half life
Sliding scale insulin per Beers criteria
- avoid due to hier risk of hypoglycemia without improvement in hyperglycemia
- refers to the sole use of short/rapid acting insulins to manage or avoid hyperglycemia in absence og basal/long acting insulin
Sliding scale correction
theuse of additional short/rapid acting insulin in conjunction with scheduled insulin
* about 1 unit of rapid acting insulin will lower BS by 50mg/dl
if goal BS < 150
* BS200 -249: give 2 units
* BS 250-300: give 3 units
* BS 300-349: give 4 units
* BS >350: give 5 units
if GFR is <45 cut dose in half
in frail elderly with limited life expectancy A1C goal <8
Pharmacodynamics of ederly will decrease drug effect of some drugs
age-related changes in vascular, pulmonary, cardiac tissues - loss of beta receptors
* decreased effect of beta agonists - albuterol, salmeterol
* decreased effect of beta antagonists - metoprolol, carvedilol
* instead use inhaled muscarinic antagonist - tiotropium
* instead use CCB - amlidipine (increased sensitivity to diltiazem)
Statin use in elderly
- no evidednce for initiating statin in >76 years for prevention
- may be continued with established ASCVD
- may consider in these at high risk such as those with DM, CKD not on dialysis,
PPI use in elderly
consequences of long term use:
rebound hypersecretion if using for >2 months
* consider tapering to every other day, histamine blocker (rantidine or fomotidine) and PRN antacid
Potential decrease in absorbtion of select micronutrients requireing an acididc environment for absorbtion
* iron, B12
Increased fracture risk likely due to decreased Ca absorption (calcium citrate less affected can use as a supplement)
* 25% increase in overall fractures
* 47% increase in spinal fractures in post menopausal women
Magnesium absorption impaired
* increased risk of hypomagnesemia when othe mg depletinig meds are used (thiazide, loop diuretics)
* digoxin toxicity risk increased with low mg
PPI per Beers criteria
avoid scheduled use for >8 wks unless for high risk pts
(oral corticosteroids or chronic NSAID use), erosive esophagitis, barrett’s esophagitis, pathological hypersecratory condition, or demonstrated need for maintainance therapy.
*all are CPY450 2C19 inhibitors
* meds end in “-prazole”
Drug induced Hyperkalemia
TMP-SMX - induced hyperkalemia
* structurally similar to K-sparing diuretic, inhibiting K secreation, prinicple site of action is distal tubule
* EKG show tall tented T waves
* avoid use if pt is taking spironoloactone, ACEI, ARB
ACEI use in elderly
- if mild renal impairment - assure adequate hydration, take ACEI once daily in morning allows for overnight excretion of renal potassium to avoid hyperkalemia