Sketchy Pharma Flashcards
-Autoimmune Drugs -CV/renal drugs -Smooth muscle drugs
What part of the kidney does mannitol act as?
Mannitol = osmotic diuretic
-works at proximal convoluted tubule and descending loop of Henle (both of which are freely permeable to water) to draw water out into the lumen and increase free water removal
Use to draw free water out of the CNS (transiently teat ICP) and eye (decrease intraocular pressure transiently)
General use for cholinomimetics
Cholinomimetics = parasympathomimetics
Stimulate parasympathetic tone: increase gastric motility (use to treat non-obstructive ileus), increase lacrimation and salivation (tx Sjogrens), decrease intraocular pressure (use pilocarpine in glaucoma)
What lab value must be monitored in 75 yo F on Bosentan for pulmonary HTN
Bosentan = endothelin antagonist that can cause fatal hepatotoxicty
Monitor monthly LFTs
Main beta2 adrenergic effect
Beta2 activates Gs that activates PKA to relax smooth muscle
Relaxes smooth muscles in bronchial tree => bronchodilation
Relaxes smooth muscle in venuoles (vasodilation) => decreased SVR = drop in diastolic pressure
On fat cells activate lipolysis and FA release, promotes gluconeogenesis and insulin release
Describe the effect on BP of
(a) Phenylephrine
(b) Norepi
(c) Dobutamine
(d) Isoproterenol
(e) Epinephrine
BP changes
(a) Phenylephrine (pure alpha1) increases both systolic and diastolic => increases MAP w/o change in pulse pressure
(b) Norepi: alpha1 vasoconstriction => increase in MAP, little beta1
(c) Dobutamine (mostly beta1) is an inoptrope => increases systolic BP, increases MAP but w/ an increase in pulse pressure
(d) Isoproterenol (both beta1 and beta2) decreased MAP b/c of beta2 (decrease SVR) and widened pulse pressure b/c of beta1 (systolic stays relatively unchanged)
- so systolic RTS and diastolic drops, so MAP drops
(e) Epi: dose dependent change in BP
- low dose epi, beta effects predominate: widened pulse pressure (beta1 increases systolic, beta2 drops diastolic)
- high dose, alpha predominates: vasoconstriction, increased SVR, increase BP
Side effects of ACEi
a) Electrolyte abnormality
(b) Clinically troubling side effect (what bothers the pts
(c) Interaction w/ NSAIDs
ACEi side effects
(a) Hyperkalemia
- ACEi decrease aldo release, aldo generally holds onto Na causing K+ dumping, so w/o aldo we hold onto K+
(b) Persistent dry cough
- avoid this by switching to ARB if it is that troubling to pt
(c) NSAIDs decrease PGE production (PGEs vasoconstrict efferent arteriole) => both NSAIDs and ACEi dilate efferent arteriole (decrease GFR) => using them together can precipitate AKI
- same reason NSAIDs decrease loop diuretic efficacy (inhibit PGE and PGE decrease Na+ reabsorption and increases GFR)
Main indications for the following
(a) oxybutynin
(b) benztropine
Both are antimuscarinics
(a) Oxybutynin works to relax smooth muscle in the ureters and bladder wall to treat overactive bladder
(b) Benztropine is a central M1 antagonist used to treat EPS (symptoms of antipsychotics) and to improve tremor and rigidity in Parkinsons
Which diuretics work at the
(a) PCT
(b) Ascending loop of henle
(c) DCT
(d) CD
Diuretics
(a) Proximal convoluted tubule = acetazolamide, mannitol
(b) Ascending loop of henle = loop diuretics (furosemide)
(c) DCT = thiazides (HCTZ, chlorthalidone)
(d) Collecting duct = K+ sparing diuretics: amiloride, spironolactone
Are thiazides or loop diuretics used for edematous vs. mild HTN?
Thiazides work at DCT (where about 10% of Na is reabsorbed), so much less potent then loop diuretics that work at ascending loop of henle (completely ruins medullary gradient)
=> use loop diuretics for edematous states to get rid of large amounts of excess fluid, while using thiazides for mild HTN
Explain the mechanism of reflexive bradycardia w/ certain sympathomimetics
Sympathetomimetics w/ alpha1 effects (phenylephrine, NE, epi at high doses) cause reflexive bradycardia b/c baroreceptors sense elevated BP and reflexively activate beta tone
Explain the pH disturbance caused by acetazolamide
Acetazolamide = carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, decreases bicarb reabsorption at the proximal convoluted tubule of the nephron
-in exchange you get Cl- in to balance ions
=> results in hyperchloremic non-anion gap metabolic acidosis
Explain how diphenhydramine can be helpful in treating side effects of Risperidone
Diphenhydramine (H1 receptor blocker) is lipophilic => has CNS activity and can help re-establish the dopmaine-cholinergic balance in the brain, therefore helping w/ acute dystonia or other extrapyramidal side effects of antipsychotics
2 side effects specific for Verapamil over other CCBs
CCBs frequent side effects: light-headedness, headache
Verapamil specifically- constipation (literally in 25% of pts) and gingival hypertrophy (ew)
Features of acetylcholinestrase inhibitor overdose
ACh-ase OD = parasympathomimetic OD = symptoms of too much parasympathetic innervation = DUMBBELS
-also caused by organophosphate poisoning
diarrhea urination miosis (pupils constricted) bradycardia bronchospasm lacrimation salivation
Mechanism of nitrates for angina
Be specific- what molecules mediate??
Nitrates: broken down by vascular smooth muscle to release NO. NO then activates guanyl cyclase to increase cGMP. cGMP (key modulator) stimulates dephosphorylation of myosin light chain which stops it from binding to actin => smooth muscle dilation
Venous smooth muscle dilation = decreased preload = decreased LVEDV and myocardial O2 demand
Indications for CCB
(a) First line for stable angina
(b) 2 vasospasm d/o
(c) Neuro ppx
(d) HA
(e) Which for antiarrhtyhmic
Calcium channel blockres
(a) Stable angina use vasodilators (dihydropyridines) to dilate coronary arteries and decrease afterload
(b) Treat prinzmetal angina and Raynaud’s phenomenon
(c) Ppx of vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage (MC 2/2 rupture of berry aneurysm)
(d) Migraine ppx
(e) Non-dihydropyridine (cardiac selective) as anti-arrhythmic
3 contraindications for ACEi
- Hereditary angioedema (C1 estrase deficiency)
- Pregnancy- ACEi is teratogenic
- B/l renal artery stenosis- makes sense here b/c these pts need angiotensin II on board to maintain their GFR
Why do pts on extended release oral nitrates need a daily break?
Pts can develop nitrate tolerance, where vascular smooth muscle beds decrease metabolism to NO (active molecule to increase cGMP and venodilate)
W/ reduced metabolism, pt gets side effects of headaches and flushing, so give daily break from the medication to prevent tolerance build up
Describe the features of atropine overdose
Think of atropine (antimuscarinic) overdose as the opposite of dumbbels
“dry as a bat” (decreased lacrimation and salivation)
“hot as a hare” (can’t lose heat by sweat)
Tachy (can’t slow down HR)
“blind as a bad” b/c antimuscarinics cause mydriasis and cycloplegia (inability to accomodate lens to nearby objects)
“mad as a hatter”
Explain the mechanism by which ACEi help in tx of chronic HF
- ACEi decrease SVR (by causing vasodilation) => decrease afterload
- ACEi cause natruiresis => decreased preload
Mechanism by which nitroprusside is helpful in hypertensive emergency
Nitroprusside is broken down in NO, then NO increases intracellular cGMP which relaxes vascular smooth muscle => vasodilates
Decreases peripheral vascular resistance/afterload
ACEi’s effect on
(a) SVR
(b) GFR
(c) Diuresis
ACEi inhibit conversion of ATI to ATII
(a) SVR decreases b/c blocked vasoconstrictor (ATII vasoconstricts), so decreased afterload
(b) GRF decreased
- ACEi causes vasodilation all around, including vasodilation of efferent arteriole
(c) ACEi cause a natural diuresis
Use of the following antimuscarinic agents
(a) Atropine
(b) Scopolamine
(c) Ipratropium
Muscarinic antagonists = drugs that block muscarinic (parasympathetic) tone
(a) Atropine- reverse lethal bradyarrhtyhmias or AV block
(b) Scopolamine (patch) for motion sickness
(c) Ipratropium/tiotropium: inhaled muscarinic antagonists for bronchodilation and decreased airway secretion in COPD
Best initial HTN agent if pt has concomitant
(a) HF
(b) Diabetes
(c) African American
(d) Edlerly
(e) Previous MI
Try to hit two birds w/ one stone
(a,b,e) If pt has concomitant HF, diabetes, or h/o MI: start w/ ACEi b/c can reduce mortality
(c,d) African Americans and elderly do specifically well w/ CCBs