Safe Medication Use for Older Adults Flashcards

1
Q

Clinical Geriatrics

A

Maintenance of independence & prevention of disability
Multiple comorbidities
Any symptom in an elderly patient should be considered a drug side effect until proven otherwise.

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2
Q

Polypharmacy

A

Use of multiple dugs by a single patient for one or more conditions
May include “prescribing cascades”

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3
Q

Prescribing cascade

A

Using a medication to treat a side effect of another medication

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4
Q

Potentially inappropriate medications

A

Medications in with the most potential risks outweigh the potential benefits for most older adults
Use of these medications have been shown to be an independent risk factor for healthcare utilization and increased costs to paitents

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5
Q

Medication Adherence

A

Nonadherence can cause hospitalizations
“intelligent noncompliance”

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6
Q

Tools to identify PIMS

A

AGS Beers Criteria
START/STOPP Criteria
Medication Appropriateness Index
Anticholinergic Risk Scale

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7
Q

STOPP

A

Screening Tool of Older Persons’ potentially inappropriate Prescriptions
Indicates drug-drug, drug-disease, duration of treatment, dose rules

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8
Q

START

A

Screening Tool to Alert doctors to the Right Treatment
Indicates omitted drugs

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9
Q

Anticholinergic side effects

A

Vision: Impaired ADL, falls and accidents
Oral cavity: Decline in nutritional status, increased risk of infection, worsened communication
GI tract: Decline in nutritional status, worsening of disease, anxiety, pain
CV system: Worsening of disease, anxiety
Urinary tract: Incontinence, infection, loss of independence
CNS: cognitive dysfunction, impaired ADL

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10
Q

Anticholinergic medications

A

Muscle relaxants: Cyclobenzaprine, methocarbamol, carisoprodol, oxybutynin
TCAs: Amitriptyline, nortriptyline, doxepin
Antispasmodics: Dicyclomine, hyoscyamine, propantheline
Antihistamines: Diphenhydramine, chlorpheniramine, cyproheptadine, hydroxyzine, promethazine

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11
Q

Poor outcomes for Anti-Ach drugs

A

Limitations in physical and cognitive function
Worse memory and executive function
ACHE-i and bladder anticholinergics and had higher baseline cognitive function experienced a greater rate of functional decline than those on ACHE-i alone
Increased risk of dementia

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12
Q

Benzodiazepines

A

Increased risk of cognitive impairment, delirium, falls/fractures, MVAs
Increased risk of falls and hip fractures

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13
Q

Antidepressants

A

Falls, Anticholinergic ADR

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14
Q

NSAID toxicities in older adults

A

GI toxicity, CV risks, renal considerations, ulcer risk
Dose dependent

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15
Q

NSAID induced injury prevention

A

Misoprostol: Lower doses, decreased diarrhea, but less effective
H2RA: Double doses effective
PPI: Standard dose effective
High risk GI patients: COX-2 alone or NSAID + PPI offer similar but potentially insufficient protection

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16
Q

NSAIDs + Cardiovascular Risk

A

Increased risk of AMI
BBW: Can cause heart attacks or strokes

17
Q

NSAID Renal Effects in Older Adults

A

Reductions in renal blood flow, sodium and water retention, concerns for combinations with ACEI or diuretics