100114 anti thrombotic pharm Flashcards

1
Q

STEMI treatment

A

immediate reperfusion therapy

antiplatelet/antithrombotic agents, statin, aspirin, beta adrenergic blockers, nitrates

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2
Q

NSTEMI and UA treatment

A

antiplatelet/antithrombotic agents, statin, aspirin, beta adrenergic blockers, nitrates

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3
Q

alteplase MOA

A

plasminogen activator

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4
Q

adverse effects of fibrinolytic therapy

A

bleeding

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5
Q

contraindications to thrombolytic therapy

A

about 30% of pts unsuited for thrombolytics

situations where drug therapy could impair necessary fibrin clots within circulation

active peptic ulcer, recent stroke, recovering from recent surgery

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6
Q

anticoagulants’ goals

A

inhibit activation of thrombin by Xa
directly inhibit thrombin
decrease production of functional prothrombin

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7
Q

unfractionated heparin MOA

A

catalyzes antithrombin’s actions on Xa and thrombin

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8
Q

low molecular weight heparin MOA

A

catalyzes antithrombin’s action on Xa

enoxaparin, dalteparin

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9
Q

fondaparinux

A

catalyzes antithrombin’s action on Xa

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10
Q

unfractionated heparin, LMWHs, fondaparinux are all administered how?

A

parenterally

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11
Q

side effects of unfractionated heparin

A

heparin induced thrombocytopenia

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12
Q

LMWH and fondaparinux have an advantage over UFH how?

A

they have longer half lives and more predictable bioavailability (less bleeding, less risk of thrombocytopenia)

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13
Q

direct thrombin inhibitor

A

bivalirudin
inhibits independently of antithrombin
acts on both circulating and clot bound thrombin

no thrombocytopenia

unstable angina pts undergoing PCI

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14
Q

MOA of thienopyridines

A

prevent ADP and P2Y12/P2Y1 interaction so that platelet cannot have increased Ca and be activated

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15
Q

GP IIb/IIIa receptor antagonists MOA

A

prevent fibrinogen binding in the GP IIb/IIIa

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16
Q

aspirin MOA

A

irreversibly actylates COX-1 in platelet. blocks production of thromboxane, which activates platelets and helps with platelet aggregation

platelets lack nuclei so permanent effect of aspirin

endothelial cells (which produce prostacyclin downstream of COX) do not experience loss of prostacyclin like platelets experience loss of thromboxane because endothelial cells have nuclei

17
Q

aspirin uses

A

UA, acute MI, history of MI

chronic stable angina without history of MI

pts who’ve had minor stroke or transient cerebral ischemia

pts who have undergone coronary artery bypass

should not be used for primary prevention to completely healthy ppl

18
Q

which thienopyridines are irreversible

A

clopidogrel, prasugrel

19
Q

advantage of reversible platelet inhibitor

A

if pt requires surgery (like coronary bypass) and is taking drug like clopidogrel or aspirin, you have to wait for platelet fxn to return to normal (platelet life span is 7-10 days)

20
Q

side effects of thienopyridines

A

bleeding

GI related symptoms

21
Q

clopidogrel is metabolized by

A

CYP2C19

22
Q

effectiveness of thienopyridines compared to aspirin

A

as monotherapy, are modestly superior to aspirin in reducing risk of MI

23
Q

glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor antagonists examples

A

abciximab, eptifibatide

24
Q

glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibition is reversible or irrev?

A

reversibly inhibit the final common pathway of platelet aggregation-binding of GPIIb/IIIa receptor to fibrinogen and vWF. so platelets cannot stick to each other and you don’t get formation of the hemostatic plug

25
Q

rivaroxaban MOA

A

inhibits Xa

26
Q

dabigatran MOA

A

inhibits thrombin