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What are the three most important characteristics of a drug?
Effectiveness
Safety
Selectivity
What is THE most important characteristic of a drug?
Effectiveness
Effectiveness
When a drug elicits the response it is intended to do
Safety
A drug that cannot produce a harmful side effect
NOTE: There is no completely safe drug
Selectivity
A drug only elicits the response it was intended to, there are no side effects
NOTE: There is no truly selective drug, all drugs have side effects
Every medication is a...
double-edged sword
Therapeutic objective
Maximum benefit with minimum harm
NOTE: This is also the goal of nursing
Six main rights of medication administration
1. Right medication/drug
2. Right dose
3. Right patient
4. Right route
5. Right time
6. Right documentation
What should be monitored for any drug?
-vital signs
-oxygen saturation
-mental status
-observing and reporting side effects
- managing side effects
- patient/family education
When should trough levels be drawn?
30 minutes before next med administration
Agonist analogy
Key opens the lock and opens the door
Antagonist analogy
Key is put in the lock and gets stuck but does not open the door
How are drugs rated for pregnancy?
Either A, B, C, D, or X
Pregnancy category A
Safest
Pregnancy category C
Animals show risk
Pregnancy category D
Shown to have risk in human
Only take if benefits outweigh the risks
Pregnancy category X
Risk always outweighs the benefits
How are all drugs rated related to abuse potential?
Schedule I-V
Schedule I drug
Highest abuse potential and not approved for medical use
Ex: Heroin, Marijuana, LSD
Schedule II drugs
High abuse potential
Ex: Opioids
Schedule III drugs
Less abuse potential
Combination drugs
Ex: Codeine+Tylenol
Schedule IV drugs
Mild physical or psychological dependence
Medically indicated
Ex: Benzodiazapines
Schedule V drugs
Medically accepted
Limited dependency potential
Ex: OTC's
Pharmacokinetics
What the body does to the drug
4 processes affecting pharmacokinetics
ADME
Absorption
Distribution
Metabolism
Excretion
Absorption
Time from entry into the body until entry into blood stream
Distribution
How the drug is carried through the body
Metabolism
What happens to the drug once absorbed?
Ex: Fist pass effect
Excretion
How the body gets rid of the drug
Ex: Kidney, liver, bowels, sweat, etc.
Serum half life
How long it takes for the blood level of a medication to decrease by 50%
How long does it take for a drug to achieve a steady state?
4-5 half lives
Lethal dose
A dose that will kill 50% of animals tested
Effective dose
A dose that produces a predefined response in 50% of those tested
Therapeutic index measures
A drug's safety
If a drug has a small/narrow therapeutic index is it safe or not safe?
Not safe
If a drug has a large/broad therapeutic index is it safe or not safe?
Safe
6 types of drug-drug interactions
1. Additive
2. Synergistic
3. Interference
4. Displacement
5. Antagonism
6. Incompatibility
Additive effect
1+1=2
Synergistic effect
1+1=3
Interference
One drugs slows or accelerated the metabolism or excretion of anoth
Displacement
Two drugs competing for binding sites
Antagonism
Two drugs cancel the effects of the other
Incompatibility
Physical interaction of two drugs that interfere with the effects of at least one of the drugs
Adverse effects of drugs are dependent on...
Dosage
Age
Medical history
Therapeutic index
Drug-drug interactions
Allergic reactions
Occurs with the second dose of the drug because of prior sensitization of the immune system
Ranges from mild itching to anaphylaxis
Idiosyncratic reaction
Unusual, unexpected reaction to medications usually a results of genetic predisposition
Iatrogenic
A disease caused by drugs; almost identical to naturally occurring diseases
Ex: Anti-psychotics may cause Parkinson-like symptoms
Carcinogenicity
The ability of a drug to cause cancer
3 most common medication errors
Confusing patient name
Illegibly written prescription
Wrong route (IM instead of IV)
Narrow spectrum vs broad spectrum abx
Narrow spectrum is specific for a certain organism
Broad spectrum covers many organisms and is useful when you don't know the cause of infection
Penicillins MOA
Inhibit cell wall synthesis
Penicillins are the drug of choice for what?
Pneumonia and meningitis
Infections caused by sensitive gram+ cocci and bacilli
Strep. pharyngitis
Empiric therapy
Treatment of an infection before specific culture information has been positively identified
Types of drugs for allergic rhinitis?
Anti-histamines
Glucocorticoids
Sympathomimetics (decongestants)
Cromolyn
Anticholinergics
Antileukotrienes
H2 antagonists treat what?
Gastric and duodenal ulcers
H1 antagonists treat what?
Allergic reactions
Do antihistamines relieve nasal congestion?
No
Why would 2nd generation antihistamines be better than 1st generation?
2nd generation does not cause drowsiness
What ending do antihistamines share?
-ine
Ex: Diphenhydramine, Cetrizine, Loratadine, Fexofenadine
1st generation antihistamines can cause what main adverse effect?
Drowsiness (CNS depression)
What is the most effective/first line drug for seasonal/perennial rhinitis?
Intranasal glucocorticoids
How long does it take for an intranasal glucocorticoid to start working?
2-3 weeks
What kind of inhibitor is Cromolyn?
Mast cell inhibitor
Cromolyn is best when given when?
Prophylactically 2-3 weeks before allergies begin
How long should someone take a decongestant for?
3-5 days maximum or they risk rebound congestion
What kind of medicine is pseudoephedrine and phenylephrine?
Decongestants
What medication for asthma is an anticholinergic? What does it do?
Ipratropium
Decreases secretions
What are the two opioid antitussives?
Codeine and Hydrocodone
What medication is an expectorant?
Robitussin (Guaifenesin)
First and #1 management of STEMI is what?
MONAB
What makes up MONAB?
Morphine
Oxygen
Nitrates
Aspirin
Beta blockers
Which patient would be a candidate for thrombolytic therapy?
A patient with a massive pulmonary emboli
A patient comes in with a STEMI. When does he have to be in the cath lab by? Thrombolytic therapy?
Cath lab- Within 90 minutes
Thrombolytic therapy- within 30 minutes
Choose one or the other-not both
What four drugs will be taken indefinitely post-MI?
Beta-blocker
ACE inhibitor
Statin
Anti-platelet/anti-coagulant
What is the most common condition to occur post-MI?
Ventricular dysrhythmias
Three antiplatelets for cath lab?
A -grel drug (Clopidigrel, tricagrelor, prasugrel)
Abciximab
Aspirin
Thrombolytic drugs end in what?
-teplase
ACE inhibitors end in what?
-pril
Beta-blockers end in what?
-lol
How to treat hemophilia?
Replace the clotting factor
Hemophilia A is missing what factor?
VIII (8)
A sounds like 8
Hemophilia B is also known as what?
Christmas disease
Hemophilia B is missing what clotting factor?
IX (9)
B-9 (benign)
Desmopressin is used for what?
Prevents bleeding in mild hemophilia A
Name a prokinetic drug and what it's used for?
Metaclopramide (Reglan)
Increase gastric motility and rate of gastric emptying for decreased N/V post-op/radiation
Name a serotonin receptor antagonist and why it's used?
Odansetron (Zofran)
To decrease N/V associated with chemo and operations
Name a phenothiazine and why it's used?
Promethazine (Phenergan)
N/V associated with chemo and post-op
Name two corticosteroids used for N/V after chemo?
Dexamethasone and methylprednisolone
Substance P/neurokinin1 antagonists do what and name one?
Prevents nausea and vomiting
Ex: Aprepitant (Emend)
Contraindications for laxative use
Individuals experiencing unknown abdominal/bowel pain
Acute surgical abdomen
Fecal impaction or bowel obstruction
Habitual use
Use with caution in pregnancy and lactation
5 main types of laxatives
Bulk-forming
Surfactants
Irritant/stimulant
Lubricant/osmotic
Lactulose
Bulk forming laxative example, group, and how it works?
Psyllium
Methylcellulose
Group 3
Fluid is key! It's softens and enlarges the mass
Surfactant laxative example, group, and how it works?
Docusate
Group 3
Increases water and electrolytes in intestine
Irritant/stimulant laxative example, group, and how it works?
Bisacodyl and Senna
Group 2
Stimulates peristalsis and decreases absorption of water and electrolytes
Lubricant/Osmotic laxative example, group, and how it works?
Magnesium hydroxide and Polyethylene glycol (Miralax)
Group 1
Retains water and promotes MAJOR peristalsis
Lactulose laxative group and why to take it?
Group 1
Decreases ammonia and is used for constipation and HEPATIC ENCEPHALOPATHY
Aggressive factors of PUD?
H. pylori, NSAIDs, acid, pepsin, smoking
Treatment for PUD includes what 3 drugs and lasts how long?
Amoxicillin
Clarithromycin
PPI or H2 blocker
10-14 days
What is the big problem with PPI's?
Polypharmacy- usually don't need it out of the hospital but doctors don't know why they're on it so they continue their prescriptions
What patient can't take a PPI?
A patient on HIV drugs