Medication Flashcards

1
Q

What is the dosing of dexamethasone or prednisone used in acute asthma treatment ?

A

Dexamethasone 0.3 mg/kg per dose to max dose of 10 mg Prednisone 2mg/kg per dose to max dose of 60mg

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2
Q

Compare and contrast the dosages and time to onset of the benzodiazepines.

A
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3
Q

What are common muscarinic agonists? Side effects?

A
  • Muscarine
  • Pilocarpine
  • Methacholine

SE- headache, nervousness, polyuria, decreased blood pressure and heart rates

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4
Q

What are muscarinic antagonists? What is their function? Common side effects?

A

Atropine - 0.4 to 0.8 mg sq q4-6

Benztropine

Ipratroprium

oxybutinin

scopolamine

function of a muscarinic antagonist (vagolytics, antimuscarinic) is to lower the parasympathetic drive

SE- confusion, agitation, hallucination, restlessness

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5
Q

What is a pure alpha 1 agonist, dosages, side effects?

A

Phenylephrine

100-300 ug/min

SE= constriction of smooth muscle- increased BP, increased sphincter tone, uterus and prostate tone, dilatation of radial muscle= pupillary dilatation

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6
Q

Beta 1 agonist, examples, side effects, so on?

A

dobutamine

2-20 ug/kg/min

Increased cardiac performance–> increased heart rate, contractility, conduction speed,

increased fat release for energy

increased release of renin–>

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7
Q

what is the distrobution of alpha 1 agonists and the general function in the body?

A

constriction of smooth muscle

Distrobution

  • blood vessels
  • sphincters
  • uterus and prostate
  • eye (radial muscle)
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8
Q

What is the distrobution of alpha 2 receptors and their general function?

A

Inhibition of sympathetic autonomic ganglia (decrease the sympathetic nervous system)

distrobution

  • presynaptic ganglionic neurons
  • GI tract
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9
Q

what is the distrobution and general function of beta 1 receptors in the body?

A

Increased cardiac performance and liberation of energy

distrobution

  • heart (increased rate, contractility, conduction speed)
  • fat cells ( release fat for energy during lypolysis)
  • kidney (release renin to conserve water)
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10
Q

What is the distrobution and funciton of beta 2 receptors?

A

Relaxation of smooth muscle

Distrobution

Lungs (bronchodilation)

Blood vessels

Uterus

GI

Bladder

Liver (liberates glucose via glycogenolysis)

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11
Q

What are the 3 categories of beta blockers? What are the common kinds of each 3 categories?

A

1) Cardio-selective
- atenolol
- bisoprolol
- metoprolol
2) Non-selective
- Nadolol
- propranolol
3) Non-selective beta and alpha 1 blockade
- carvedilol
- labetolol

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12
Q

What are the alpha 1 antagonists? Side effects?

A

Prazosin

Phentolamine

SE- vasodilatation of smooth muscle-> decreased constriction of blood vessels, decreased sphincter tone, uterus and prostate relaxation, relaxation of radial muscles of eye

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13
Q

What is the major problem with nitroprusside?

A

cyanide toxicity

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14
Q

What is the desired wedge pressure in left heart failure?

A

the highest pressure that will augment cardiac output without producing pulmonary edema

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15
Q

What is the medical treatment for graves disease?

A

Methimazole and propylthiouracil counteract the formation of thyroid hormone

Radioactive iodine destroys the gland itself

(contraindicated in prenancy, and those wanting to get pregnant)

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16
Q

What is digoxin, and what are its important side effects?

A

digoxin is a cardiac glycoside that is used to

1) increase SV and CO
2) decrease sympathetic tone
3) compensatorily increase parasympathetic tone

Its main mechanism of action is to increase the intracellular calcium levels which increases SV and CO, and reduces the need for high sympathetic tone

Its two major indications are

1) CHF (third line)
2) atrial fibbrilation

THe theraputic index of digoxin is very low with working doses being between 0.5-2.5 nmol/L and toxicity occuring between 2.6-3.0 nmol/L

Certain drugs can increase the amount of digoxin in the blood

  • potasium sparing diuretics
  • antiarrhythmics (quinidine and amiodarone)
  • calcium antagonists (verapamil only)
  • HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors

Hypokalemia and hypercalcemia can increase digoxin sensitivity

Digoxin toxicity

gynecomastia

GI distress (N/V, abdo pain, diarrhea)

CNS disturbances- confusion, dizziness, agitation

Cardiovascular: arrhythmias, heart block

visual: orange tinted vision, visual disturbances

17
Q

H2 receptor antagonists

A

Ranitidine (Zantac)

150mg po BID usual dose

AE: diarrhea, constipation, headache, fatigue, confusion

Dosage: should decrease dosage in elderly, decreased renal function….

18
Q

PPI

A

Pantoprazole (Pantoloc)

40mg po daily