Cardiac pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

How does aspirin work?

A

Irreversibly acetylates COX
COX is needed for the formation of thromboxane A2, which stimulates platelet activation
Inhibition of COX therefore reduces platelet aggregation, preventing arterial thrombus formation

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2
Q

How does clopidogrel work

A

Irreversibly inhibits ADP
ADP inhibits adenyl cyclase–> a decreased in cAMP and an increased in intracellular calcium
Increased calcium–> increased platelet aggregation
Used in combination with aspirin or in patients for whom aspirin is contraindicated

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3
Q

When is aspirin used?

A

For secondary prevention following MI, TIA/stroke, and for patients with angina or peripheral vascular disease
May be used for primary prevention in high risk patients

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4
Q

When is clopidogrel used in conjunction with/instead of aspirin?

A

Used in patients with high risk of GI bleeding who are unlikely to tolerate aspirin
Used with aspirin after coronary stent insertion and in acute coronary syndrome

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5
Q

Which B blocker is relatively B1 selective?

A

Bisoprolol

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6
Q

What are the effects of blocking B1 receptors

A

Negative ionotrophic and chronotropic effect

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7
Q

What are the effects of blocking B2 receptors

A

peripheral vasoconstriction; bronchoconstriction

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8
Q

In which patients are beta-blockers contraindicated?

A

Asthma/COPD

Heart block

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9
Q

What are some of the common side effects of beta-blockers?

A
Cold extremities
Fatigue
Bronchospasm
Bradycardia
Erectile dysfunction
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10
Q

What are beta blockers used for?

A
Angina
Hypertension
Antidysrhythmic
Post-MI (reduced mortality)
Heart failure (with caution)
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11
Q

What is furosemide? What is it used for?

A

Loop diuretic used to treat heart failure

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12
Q

How does furosemide work?

A

Inhibits resorbtion of NaCl in ascending loop of Henle causing diuresis

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13
Q

What are the side effects of furosemide?

A
Hyponatraemia
Hypotension
Hypokalaemia
Hypovolaemia/dehydration
Hypocalcaemia
Ototoxic (may cause deafness)
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14
Q

What is bendroflumethiazide? What it is used for?

A

Thiazide diuretic used in hypertension

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15
Q

How do the thiazide diuretics work?

A

Inhibit NaCl resorbtion in the distal tubule–> excretion of Na+ and Cl- with accompanying H2O

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16
Q

What are the side effects of thiazide diuretics?

A

Hypokalaemia
Hyper-uricaemia–> gout
Impaired glucose tolerance

17
Q

In which patients are thiazide diuretics contra-indicated?

A

Patients taking digoxin (due to combined hypokalaemic effects)

Diabetic patients

18
Q

What is amiloride?

A

A potassium sparing diuretic. Can cause hyperkalaemia and GI upset

19
Q

What is spironalactone?

A

Potassium sparing diuretic