pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 6 medical rights

A

Right time, route, amount, medication, patient, documentation

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2
Q

what does asprin do?

A

block platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction

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3
Q

when do you give a patient asprin

A

when they are experiencing chest pain suggestive of cardiac ischemia and mayocardial infarction

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4
Q

what are the contraindications for asprin and what they mean

A

Asthma exacerbation: ask the patient is they have asthma and if it has ever been exacerbated by taking NSAIDS

Allergy/hypersensitivity: ask the patient if they have an allergy to NSAIDS (Ibuprofen, or naproxen)

Pediatric: ASA not indicated unless rare specific ischemic cardiac history

Dose: 162mg

Acute bleed: look for any signs or symptoms of an acute bleed including signs of CVA or history of recent head trauma

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5
Q

Cautions for Aspirin, approach, and physical assessment

A

Pregnancy: ask patient about possibility of pregnancy

recent internal bleeding: ask about blood in vomit/stool (GI Bleed)
- assess for S/S of internal hemorrhaging (blood in vomit/stool, shock, rigid abdomen, bruising around the naval)
- assess for head injuries
- s/s of stroke
- s/s of intracranial pressure (increased BP, irregular breathing, and bradycardia, unequal pupils, DLOC)

bleeding disorders: ask patient about any bleeding disorders, review history (disorders such as hemophilia result when the blood lacks clotting factors)

anticoagulant: review medications for patients currently taking anticoagulants

surgery: ask about recent major surgeries
- assess for scars indicating recent surgery

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6
Q

side effects of asprin

A

Respiratory wheezing
GI; heartburn, nausea and vomiting

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7
Q

what is the purpose of nalozone?

A

to reverse respiratory depression/mental status secondary to actual or suspected narcotic overdose.
- competes with opioid receptors sites. displaces previously administered opioids from their receptors

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8
Q

Indications to give Narcan

A

Decreased LOC, respiratory depression (requiring BVM), s/s suggestive of narcotic overdose (pinpoint pupils, drug paraphernalia, track marks, pill bottles, etc.)

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9
Q

contraindications of narcan (naloxone hydrochloride0

A

known allergy; ask bystanders, family, friends

pediatric; naloxone not given to neonate

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10
Q

cautions for nalozone (narcan)

A

acute withdrawal symptoms/aggression ; continualy assess and prepare for withdrawal symptoms
nausea, vomitting, aggression, sweating, tachycardia

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11
Q

Route of narcan

A

intermuscular (IM)

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12
Q

acronym for asprin

A

AAADP
Asthma exacerbation, allergy, acute bleed, dose, pediatric

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13
Q

accronym for cautions of asprin

A

PARBS

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14
Q

acronym for contraindications of naloxone

A

KP
Known allergy, Pediatric

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15
Q

contraindication for entonox and physical assessment

A

Pneumothorax; history of trauma.
- assess for chest truma, s/s of tension pneumothorax (decreased lung sounds, chest pain, shock)

air embolism; history of IV drugs, history of IV drug use.
- assess for deep vein thrombos (swelling in your foot, ankle, or leg, usually on the one side)
- assess for pulmonday embolism (acute onset chest pain, shortness of breathe, decreased SpO2 levels)
- s/s of stroke (FASTVAN)

Inhalation Injury; history suggesting possible inhalation injury
- assess for inhalation injury (soot, charring, stridor, laryngeal, swelling, etc)

Nitroglycerin; nitro in the last 5 minutes

Decompression illness; have you been diving recently?
- assess for decompression sickness (pain in joints, lethargy, mediastinal emphysema, subcutaneous emphysema, rash/mottled skin)

Inability to comply; is your patient able to understand and safely self-administer?
- AVPU/GCS scale

Enclosed space; assess space for adequate ventilation
- open air vent/window

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16
Q

cautions for Entonox (nitrous oxide) and physical assessment

A

Shock
- assess for shock (LOC, Skin, review vital signs

abdominal distension
- palpate the abdomen for distension or signs of trapped air

Depressant drugs; any depressant drugs on board?

Facial injuries
- assess any injuries that would restrict the patient from self administering

COPD; history of COPD? will entonox exacerbate?

17
Q

onset, peak and duration of entonox

A

Onset; rapid
Peak; immediate
duration: until discontinues

18
Q

onset, peak and duration of Narcan

A

Onset: 3-5 minutes
Peak: unknown
duration; 45 minutes

19
Q

onset, peak and duration of aspirin

A

onset; 1 hour or 20 minutes if chewed
peak: 1-2 hours
duration: 4-6 hours

20
Q

what do you need to do before administering a drug

A
  • baseline set of vital
  • TRAMPD
  • contraindications and cautions