pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

2 methods for drug administration

A
  • enteral: involves use of GI tract for administration of drug
  • parenteral: involves any form of drug administration not involving GI tract
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2
Q

oral adminstration

enteral

A
  • most common and easiest
  • allows for gradual increase in drug levels d/t GI absorption
  • downside: compound must be lipid-soluble so that GI can absorb it; can cause gastric irritation, metabolism and degradation of drug by liver before reaching target
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3
Q

sublingual administration

enteral

A
  • through sublingual mucosa under tongue or buccal mucosa btw cheeck and gums
  • after absorption - travels to heart and enters circulation
  • faster introduction of drug - good for acute pain
  • drugs bypass liver and are not overly metabolized before reaching target
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4
Q

inhalation

parenteral

A
  • gaseous or aerosol form
  • lungs have large surface area and can enter system quickly
  • for pulmonary pathologies
  • disadvatnage - can irritate resp tract
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5
Q

rectal

enteral

A
  • suppository in rectum
  • for pts who cannot take drugs orally - unconscious or vomiting
  • bypass liver
  • drugs not absorbed well through rectal cavity compared to sublingual and oral
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6
Q

topical

parenteral

A
  • drugs poorly absorbed through skin into circulation - mostly reserved for treating localized skin, ear, eye, nose
  • can apply to mucosa for better absorption into circulation
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7
Q

transdermal

parenteral

A
  • drug directly to skin w/ intent that drug will absorb throug hskin and enter systemic circulation
  • slow, controlled release of drug over time
  • fentanyl patches
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8
Q

injection

parenteral

A
  • local or systemic
  • invasive, can cause infection
  • intravenous (IV): into peripheral vein, fast, 100% bioavailable
  • intra-arterial: into artery, directly to target tissue, difficult, chemo
  • subcutaneous: under skin into fat or connective tissue, for slow release, can self-administer
  • intramuscular (IM): into skeletal muscle, botulinum toxin for spasticity, faster than subcutaneous but still steady release into ciruclation; can cause localized soreness and pain
  • intrathecal: into sheath like subarachnoid space of meninges, intro of drug in CNS without passing BBB
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9
Q

bioavailability

A
  • % of drug that makes it into systemic circulation from site of original administration
  • will vary depending on how much drug becomes degraded before reaching systemic ciruclation
  • IV drugs are 100% bioavailable
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10
Q

dose response curve

A
  • graphic representation of drug and body’s response to drug
  • as dosage increases, more receptors for drug become activated -> increases body’s response to drug
  • body’s response will plateau at certain dosage
  • can be used to compare potency of drugs
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11
Q

half-life

A
  • rate of elimination of drug
  • if half-life is 2 hours and 4,000 units are administed, 2,000 will remain after 2 hours, and 1,000 will remain after 4 hours
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12
Q

drug schedules

A
  • schedule I: potential for abuse and high risk for addiction -> for research purposes and not medical treatment (LSD)
  • schedule II: potential for abuse and addiction but still approved for medical use, no automatic refills (opioids, amphetamines, barbiturates)
  • schedule III: lower potential for abuse but moderate risk for dependence, allows for automatic refills (opioid and non-opioid mixes, anabolic steroids)
  • schedule IV: lower potential for abuse and mild risk for dependence, some limitations (anxiolytic - phenobarbital)
  • schedule V: lowest potential for abuse and addiction, cough and cold meds with low opioid doses
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13
Q

pharmacodynamics

A
  • how a drug exerts therapeutic effect on body at cellular and organ level

what drug does to body

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14
Q

pharmacotherapeutics

A
  • use of drugs for preventing, treating, and diagnosing diseases
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15
Q

pharmacokinetics

A
  • how drugs are absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and eliminated by body

what body does to drug

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16
Q

therapeutic index (TI)

A
  • measurement of safety of drug
  • ratio, compares effectiveness of drug against lethal effects
  • low TI = less safe
17
Q

should you put heat modalities near lidocaine patches

A

no - can speed rate of absorption and be toxic

18
Q

glucocorticoid antiarthritic agents

A

catabolic effects - can lead to breakdown of tendon, bone, or skin

19
Q

want PT sessions _ after PD levodopa administration

A

1 hour
- monitor BP - orthohypo