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Generic name
The official, non-proprietary name of a drug based on its chemical or active ingredient.
Trade drug name (brand name)
The proprietary name given to a drug by the manufacturer; the same generic drug can have multiple trade names.
Indication
Reason why a medication should be given to a patient.
Contraindication
Reason that a medication should not be given to a patient because of the potential for harmful effects.
Drug action (mechanism of action)
The biochemical or physiological process by which a drug produces its effect in the body, typically describing how it interacts with receptors, enzymes, or cellular targets.
Interaction
A situation in which one drug's effects are altered by another drug, food, supplement, or substances; interactions can increase or decrease a drug's efficacy or toxicity.
Adverse effect
An unintended, harmful, or undesirable response to a drug taken at a normal therapeutic dose; differs from side effects in that they are specifically harmful.
Side effect
A secondary, usually unintended effect of a drug that occurs at normal therapeutic doses; side effects are not necessarily harmful and may simply be unwanted or inconvenient.
Dose
The specific amount of a drug administered at one time or over a defined period to achieve the therapeutic effects.
Route of administration
The path by which a drug is delivered into or onto the body; the route affects absorption, onset of action, and bioavailability.
Oral (PO)
Swallowed (tablets, capsules, liquids).
Intravenous (IV)
Injected directly into a vein.
Intramuscular (IM)
Injected into muscle.
Subcutaneous (SC)
Injected under the skin.
Topical
Applied to the skin or mucous membrane.
Inhalation
Breathed into the lungs.
Intranasal (IN)
Sprayed into the nasal cavity, absorbed through the mucous membrane.
Sublingual (SL)
Dissolved under the tongue.
Rectal (PR)
Administered via the rectum.
Oxygen
Indications include hypoxia or suspected hypoxia (SPO2 < 94%), respiratory distress, cardiac chest pain or suspected AMI, shock or major trauma, carbon monoxide poisoning, altered mental status of unknown cause, cardiopulmonary arrest, anaphylaxis, seizures.
Oxygen contraindications
No absolute contraindications in the emergency setting; use with caution in COPD patients.
Oxygen dose & route
Inhalation via nasal cannula, non-rebreather mask (NRB), or BVM depending on clinical need and patient tolerance.
Oxygen drug actions
Increases the partial pressure of oxygen in the alveoli, driving more oxygen across the capillary membrane and into the blood.
Oxygen adverse effects
Hypoxic drive suppression in COPD patients, oxygen toxicity, fire hazard.
Activated charcoal
Indications include poisoning by mouth (ingestion).
Activated charcoal contraindications
Altered mental status or inability to protect airway, ingestion of acids or alkalis, no gag reflex.
Activated charcoal dose & route
PO, mixed in water as a slurry, for adults and children, 1g/kg body weight.
Activated charcoal drug actions
Binds to certain poisons and prevents them from being absorbed into the body.
Activated charcoal adverse effects
Aspiration into the lungs if the patient vomits, bowel obstruction.
Oral glucose
Indications include altered mental status with a known history of diabetes.
Oral glucose contraindications
Unconscious or unresponsive patient, inability to swallow or protect airway.
Oral glucose dose & route
PO, administered inside the cheek as a gel or tablet chewed and swallowed.
Naloxone
Indications include suspected opioid overdose with respiratory depression or unresponsiveness.
Naloxone contraindications
Known hypersensitivity to naloxone.
Naloxone drug actions
Opioid antagonist that rapidly reverses respiratory depression, sedation, and analgesia caused by opioids.
Albuterol
Indications include acute bronchospasm due to asthma and COPD exacerbation.
Inhaled medication route
Inhaled via nebulizer or prescribed metered-dose inhaler (MDI)
Dosage for nebulizer
2.5mg in 3 mL with normal saline via nebulizer
Dosage for MDI
2 puffs via MDI
Beta-2 adrenergic agonist
Stimulates beta-2 receptors in the bronchial smooth muscle causing bronchodilation
Mild histamine release
A potential action of beta-2 adrenergic agonists
Drug interactions
Beta blockers, MAO inhibitors, tricyclic antidepressants, diuretics
Adverse effects of beta-2 agonists
Significant tachycardia, cardiac arrhythmia, paradoxical bronchospasm
Common side effects of beta-2 agonists
Tachycardia, tremors, nervousness or anxiety, headache, palpitations, hypokalemia with repeated doses
Generic names for epinephrine
EpiPen, EpiPen Jr, Adrenalin, Auvi-Q
Indications for epinephrine
Anaphylaxis, severe asthma unresponsive to albuterol
Adult dosage for epinephrine
0.3 mg of 1:1,000 concentration IM
Pediatric dosage for epinephrine
0.15 mg of 1:1,000 concentration IM
Actions of epinephrine
Stimulates both alpha and beta adrenergic receptors causing vasoconstriction, increased heart rate and contractility, and bronchodilation
Adverse effects of epinephrine
Hypertensive crisis, cardiac arrhythmias, myocardial ischemia, pulmonary edema, tissue necrosis if injected into a finger or hand
Common side effects of epinephrine
Tachycardia, anxiety and restlessness, pallor, tremor, headache, hypertension
Generic names for nitroglycerin
Nitrostat, Nitrolingual, NitroBid
Indications for nitroglycerin
Chest pain associated with suspected angina or acute coronary syndrome, acute pulmonary edema
Contraindications for nitroglycerin
Systolic blood pressure <100 mmHg, recent use of phosphodiesterase inhibitors, right-sided MI, head trauma, pediatric patients
Dosage for nitroglycerin
0.4 mg SL, may repeat every 3-5 min up to 3 doses if BP remains adequate
Actions of nitroglycerin
Relaxes vascular smooth muscle causing vasodilation thereby reducing preload/cardiac workload
Adverse effects of nitroglycerin
Hypotension, syncope, reflex tachycardia
Common side effects of nitroglycerin
Headache, burning sensation under tongue, flushing, dizziness
Generic names for glucagon
GlucaGen, Gvoke, Glucagon Emergency Kit
Indications for glucagon
Severe hypoglycemia in an unconscious or uncooperative patient
Contraindications for glucagon
Known hypersensitivity, adrenal gland tumor, recent insulin use, liver disease
Dosage for glucagon
1 mg IM (requires mixing)
Actions of glucagon
Stimulates the liver to convert stored glycogen into glucose
Adverse effects of glucagon
Vomiting with aspiration risk, hypokalemia, hypotension
Common side effects of glucagon
Nausea and vomiting, tachycardia, headache
Generic names for aspirin
Bayer Aspirin, Ecotrin, Bufferin
Indications for aspirin
Suspected acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina
Contraindications for aspirin
Known allergy to aspirin or NSAIDs, active GI bleeding, recent significant GI bleed
Dosage for aspirin
325 mg PO, chewed
Actions of aspirin
Inhibits platelet aggregation and clotting
Adverse effects of aspirin
Bronchospasm in aspirin-sensitive patients, GI bleeding, allergic reaction
Common side effects of aspirin
Nausea or upset stomach, mild GI irritation
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