NSAID Review Flashcards

1
Q

Which of the following prostaglandins is released from endothelial tissue and has an anti-platelet effect (inhibits platelet adhesion, activation, and aggregation)?

A - Prostacyclin aka PGI2
B - Thromboxane A2 aka TXA2
C - Prostaglandin F2a aka PGF2a
D - Prostaglandin E2 aka PGE2

A

(A - PGI2)

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1
Q

Which end product of the arachidonic acid pathway do NSAIDs block?

A

(Prostaglandins)

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2
Q

Which of the following prostaglandins triggers vasoconstriction and platelet aggregation?

A - Prostacyclin aka PGI2
B - Thromboxane A2 aka TXA2
C - Prostaglandin F2a aka PGF2a
D - Prostaglandin E2 aka PGE2

A

(B - TXA2)

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3
Q

Which of the following prostaglandins is a major proinflammatory and pain mediator, triggers vasodilation, decreases GI motility, and induces a fever?

A - Prostacyclin aka PGI2
B - Thromboxane A2 aka TXA2
C - Prostaglandin F2a aka PGF2a
D - Prostaglandin E2 aka PGE2

A

(D - PGE2)

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4
Q

Which of the following prostaglandins triggers vasoconstriction, bronchoconstriction, and uterine and GI small muscle contractions?

A - Prostacyclin aka PGI2
B - Thromboxane A2 aka TXA2
C - Prostaglandin F2a aka PGF2a
D - Prostaglandin E2 aka PGE2

A

(C - PGF2a)

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5
Q

Which of the following prostaglandins is primarily induced by COX-2?

A - Prostacyclin aka PGI2
B - Thromboxane A2 aka TXA2
C - Prostaglandin F2a aka PGF2a
D - Prostaglandin E2 aka PGE2

A

(D - PGE2)

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6
Q

Which of the following prostaglandins is primarily induced by COX-1?

A - Prostacyclin aka PGI2
B - Thromboxane A2 aka TXA2
C - Prostaglandin F2a aka PGF2a
D - Prostaglandin E2 aka PGE2

A

(B - TXA2)

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7
Q

What are some of the good things that PGE2 does?

A

(Promotes mucosal blood flow in the GIT and kidneys, maintains kidney fluid balance, and induces bronchodilation)

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8
Q

Which of the prostaglandins are vasodilators?

A

(PGE2 and Prostacyclin/PGI2)

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9
Q

Which of the prostaglandins are vasoconstrictors?

A

(PGF2 and thromboxane A2/TXA2)

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10
Q

Which of the NSAIDs are the most COX-2 selective?

A

(Any drug that ends in coxib (firocoxib, robenacoxib, deracoxib), everything else is variable in COX-2 selectivity)

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11
Q

COX-2 selective inhibitors are the safer choice particularly in healthy animals but can be less safe in patients with what types of underlying diseases?

A

(Renal, GI, or cardiovascular dzs)

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12
Q

In general for NSAIDs…

  • Oral bioavailability is low/moderate/high (choose).
  • Volume of distribution is small/moderate/large (choose).
  • Hepatic/renal (choose) elimination.
A
  • Oral bioavailability is low/moderate/high (choose). (High)
  • Volume of distribution is small/moderate/large (choose). (Small, high protein binding and though they have good lipophilicity, the high protein binding prevents CNS penetration)
  • Hepatic/renal (choose) elimination. (Renal)
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13
Q

Why are NSAIDs used for treatment of endotoxemia/sepsis?

A

(Bc prostaglandins are responsible for many of the clinical signs associated with endotoxemia/sepsis, they do not actually treat the toxin/bacteria)

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14
Q

If you want to use an NSAID to aid in anticoagulation, what COX selectivity would you reach for?

A

(COX-1 selective drugs, bc remember than thromboxane is COX-1 induced and thromboxane = thrombus)

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15
Q

What are the primary uses of NSAIDs?

A

(Antipyresis and tx pain by modulating inflammation)

16
Q

What are the two NSAID options for cats?

A

(Meloxicam and robenacoxib/onsior)

17
Q

What is the most common adverse effect of NSAIDs in dogs and cats which predictably tends to occur after 3-5 days of dosing?

A

(Gastritis leading to vomiting, diarrhea, and/or anorexia)

18
Q

How do the locations that dogs and cats vs. horses get GI ulcers compare?

A

(Dogs and cats → stomach and proximal small intestine; horses → stomach and right dorsal colon)

19
Q

How do NSAIDs cause GI ulcers?

A

(By inhibiting COX-2 and therefore inhibiting PGE2 which is necessary for healing pre-existing GI damage)

20
Q

Explain PG independent NSAID-induced stomach injury.

A

(NSAIDs are weak organic acids, when given orally they are non-ionized in gastric acid and become lipophilic, they then diffuse across the gastric mucosal epithelial cell membranes into the neutral cytoplasm where they are converted back into their ionized and hydrophilic form, drug is now trapped in the cell and accumulates leading to cell death)

21
Q

Why is the duodenum predisposed to NSAID related GI ulcers in dogs and cats?

A

(Bc of enterohepatic recycling, high concentrations of NSAIDs are secreted in the bile, bile is dumped into the duodenum; horses are spared from this bc they don’t have a gallbladder)

22
Q

Which NSAID is most associated with gastroduodenal perforations in dogs?

A

(Meloxicam)

23
Q

Which portions of the stomach in horses will have NSAID induced GI ulcers (i.e. if the ulcer is located in the other portion, it is likely not due to NSAIDs)?

A

(The glandular portion of the stomach is most affected by NSAID induced GI ulcers in horses, not the squamous portion)

24
Q

The decreased renal blood flow associated with blocking PGE2 and PGI2 are greatly exacerbated in patients with what issue?

A

(Dehydration bc they already have compromised renal blood flow)

25
Q

NSAID nephrotoxicity induces necrosis of what structures in the kidney?

A

(The medullary crest and the papilla, bc these structures normally receive less blood flow so they are more vulnerable to renal blood flow issues)

26
Q

As you increase the COX-1 selectively of the NSAID you are choosing to use, you are increasing the risk for thrombosis/bleeding (choose).

A

(Bleeding, bc by blocking COX-1, no thromboxane will be produced which causes thrombus formation, no thrombus = bleeding)

27
Q

You have a patient on an unknown COX selectivity NSAID who presented with a unilaterally cold forelimb paw (aka they threw a clot), you can surmise that the NSAID you gave is more COX-1/COX-2 (choose) selective.

A

(COX-2)

28
Q

(T/F) Idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity (anorexia, vomiting, icterus, hepatomegaly, increased bilirubin, ALT, ALP, AST) associated with NSAIDs is specific to carprofen.

A

(F, can occur with all NSAIDs although carprofen is the most implicated)

29
Q

What does phenylbutazone cause if it is administered perivascular?

A

(Severe tissue necrosis)

30
Q

Clostridial myositis is associated with IM injection of what NSAID in horses?

A

(Flunixin meglumine, even though it is labeled for this route of administration, do not use it!)

31
Q

(T/F) Injectable forms of phenylbutazone and flunixin meglumine can be given orally.

A

(T, taste like shit and causes mucosal irritation so mix with something tasty and rinse their mouth out after)

32
Q

How can you minimize adverse effects of NSAIDs?

A

(Dose appropriately (lowest effective dose, longest effective duration between doses), choose a drug labeled for the species you are working with, choose COX-2 selectives (safer but not entirely safe), and when provided use the dedicated dosing syringe; also don’t compound)

33
Q

What are some of the lab work tests that should be monitored regularly in animals regularly on NSAIDs?

A

(PCV/RBCs (all animals), total protein/albumin (horses), BUN/creatinine (all animals), liver enzymes (dogs, cats), and a UA (dogs, cats))