Pharm/tox Flashcards

1
Q

Which of the following is not associated with photosensitivity?

1) CBZ
2) Amiodarone
3) Lithium
4) TMP-SMX
5) Captopril

A
  1. Lithium

Photosensitivity drugs (top 10)

Doxycycline
Hydrochlorothiazide
Amiodarone
Piroxicam
Chlorpromazine
Co-trimoxazole
Captopril
Enalapril
Bendroflumethiazide
Carbamazepine

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2
Q

SICK FACES?
CRAP GPs?

A

SICK FACES = CYP3A4 inhibitors

SSRIs
Isoniazid
CCBs (verapamil,diltiazem)
Ketoconazole
Fluconazole, metronidazole
Amiodarone, allopurinol, ACUTE alcohol, antiretrovirals
Clarithromycin
Erythromycin
Sodium valproate, sulfonamide

+ grapefruit juice

CRAP GPs = CYP3A4 inducers

Chronic ETOH
Rifampicin
Anti-epileptics (CBZ)
Phenytoin

Griseolfulvin
Phenobarituate
Smoking/St Johns wort

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3
Q

What is the equivalent of the following to 10mg PO morphine:
- endone
- S/C morphine
- hydromorphone PO and s/c

A

10mg morphine PO =

3mg morphine subcut (3)

7mg endone PO (1.5)

2mg hydromorphone PO (5)

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4
Q

Hydromorphone 10mg subcut to PO?
Morphine equivalent?

A

10mg subcut = 30mg oral (3)

30mg hydromorph PO = 150 PO morphine (5)

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5
Q

Equation for drug clearance

A

clearance = (Vd x 0.7)/half life

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6
Q

amiodarone increases cyclosporine concentrations via which mechanism?

A

PGP inhibition

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7
Q

Name 3 drugs which follow zero order kinetics

A

Alcohol
Phenytoin
Aspirin/salicylates

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8
Q

What is the active isomer of Warfarin?

A

S-warfarin (super warfarin!)

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9
Q

A patient is given 320mg loading dose of a medication. The peak serum concentration is 20mg. What is the Vd?

A

Vd = loading/peak concentration

320/20 = 16L

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10
Q

Equation for loading dose

A

Loading dose = Vd x target plasma concentration.

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11
Q

Difference between a non-competitive and competitive antagonist

A

Competitive antagonist
- Reversible binding. Maximum effect CAN be reached with higher dose of agonist (curve shifts right)

Non-competitive antagonist
- Non-reversible binding. Maximum effect CAN-NOT be achieved with higher dose of agonist (curve shifts down)

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12
Q

What is tachyphylaxis

A

Phenomenon of rapid decrease in the response to a drug due to previous (long term) exposure to that drug (i.e. amphetamines)

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13
Q

Indications for a liver transplant in panadol overdose

A

Acidosis (ph 7.3)
Raised lactate (>3.0 with acidosis, >3.5 without)
Coagulopathy (raised INR) + encephalopathy + AKI (creat >300)

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14
Q

Which class(es) of diabetic medications are associated with pancreatitis?

A

GLP1 agonists
DPP4 inhibitors

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15
Q

Which enzyme is involved in the metabolism of clopidogrel?
What is it’s effect on clopidogrel efficacy?

A

CYP2C19

Metabolizes clopidogrel to it’s active compound - therefore inhibiting CYP2C19 actually DECREASES clopidogrel’s efficacy

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16
Q

Against which receptors does norepinephrine have an agonist effect?

A

alpha1 and alpha 2
beta 1

17
Q

Which medication classes are associated with jaw osteonecrosis

A

Antiresorptives* - RANK ligand inhibitors (denosumab), bisphosphonates

VEGF inhibitors - Mabs (i.e. bevacizumab, , TKIs (i.e. Sunitinib, lenvatinib)

*more common in cancer patients (high doses, immunosupressed)

18
Q

Treatment for aspirin overdose

A

Urinary alkalization OR hemodialysis if indicated (i.e. severe AKI/CKD and can’t clear)

Charcoal if present within 2 hours

19
Q

Drugs associated with crystal nephropathy

A

Acyclovir
Sulfonamide antibiotics (i.e. TMP, bactrim)
Ethylene glycol
Mega dose vitamin C
MTX
Protease inhibitors
“-navirs”

20
Q

Which of the following has the greatest influence on steady state drug level?
A. Clearance
B. Elimination
C. Half-life
D. Volume of distribution
E. Protein bounding

A

clearance

21
Q

A drug has a fraction excreted unchanged of 0.1 and a total body clearance of 50L/hr. Liver blood flow is 90/L.

What is the maximum bioavailability of the drug?

A. 40%
B. 70%
C. 90%
D. 50%

A

D - 50%

Biovailability = 1 - HER

HER = total hepatic clearance/total liver blood flow.

Renal clearance 10%, therefore hepatic clearance 90%

90 + 10 = 50L (total body clearance)

Therefore 90% x 50L –> 45L/hr (hepatic clearance)

Liver blood flow = 90

45/90 = 50% therefore HER = 50%

100 - 50% = 50%

22
Q

Which P2Y12 receptor antagonist irreversbly binds the receptor?

A

Ticagrelor (therefore short half life and TWICE daily dosing)

Prasugrel and clopidogrel = irreversible
binding

23
Q

Name the receptor for each anti-emetic:
- palonosetron
- cyclizine
- aprepitant
- olanzapine
- metoclopramide

A

Palonosetron = 5HT3
Cyclizine = 5HT1
Aprepitant = NK1 receptor
Olanzapine = 5HT2 + dopamine
Metoclopramide = D2 + 5HT3

24
Q

Statins that undergo CYP3A4 metabolism

A

atorvastatin
simvastatin

25
Q

Metabolism of isoniazid
Clinical relevance?

A

Primarily metabolized by acetylation and dehydrazination

Rate of acetylation is genetically determined.
- 50% are “slow acetylators” and 50% “rapid acetylators” (more common in asians)

slow acetylation = higher blood levels, more toxicity (i..e HEPATITIS)
rapid acetylation = lower blood levels, less efficacy

26
Q

Male Breast Ca

A

Finasteride

27
Q

Reduced protein binding?

A
  • chronic liver failure (other hypoalbum states
  • uraemia as in chronic renal failure
  • acute trauma
  • pregnancy