Therapeutics Flashcards

1
Q

Pharmacodynamics

A

How medications bind to receptors and signal intended response

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2
Q

5 actions of corticosteroids

A

1) stabilizes cell and lysosomal membranes
2) reduces vascular smooth muscle sensitivity to histamine
3) inhibits histamine release
4) decreases neutrophil migration / adherence
5) decreases production of IL-1

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3
Q

Pharmacokinetics

A

Effect of the body on a medication. Depends on absorption, distribution, bioavailability, metabolism (hepatic), and excretion (renal).

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4
Q

4 key topical steroids

A
UP: Clobetasol proprionate .05% (class I).  Usually limited to 2 weeks unless on palms or soles.  Do not use occlusion (dangerous potency).
HP: Fluocinonide .05% (class II)
MP: Triamcinolone acetonide (class IV)
LP: Hydrocoritoone 1% (class VII)
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5
Q

Lotrisone

A

Combination of clobetasol and clotrimazole (antifungal). Don’t use due to risk of side effects.

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6
Q

Where / what are gels used for?

A

Used for mucosal sites (mouth for pemphigus vulgaris) and face (acne). Contain alcohol, so may burn and dry skin.

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7
Q

What is typical dosage for oral steroids?

A

1 mg / kg / day

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8
Q

6 components of a prescription

A

Full name of medication, potency, vehicle, quantity, directions (freq and site), and refills.

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9
Q

Side effects of topical steroids

A

Acne, rosacea, perioral dermatitis, atrophy (thinning / stretch marks), contact / irritant dermatitis (more often due to the vehicle), infection, cataracts, glaucoma, purpura (bleeding may be due to thinning), rebound, tachyphylaxis (continued application → lower effect, common in psoriasis), or telangiectasias.

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10
Q

Tachyphylaxis

A

Continued application leads to less effect. Common in psoriasis

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11
Q

Which vehicles commonly cause side effects?

A

Formalin, preservatives, lanolin, etc.
Propylene glycol is a humectant and solvent. May cause irritant contact dermatitis.
Formaledhyde may cause allergic contact dermatitis

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12
Q

Calcineurin Inhibitors (types, use, population, mechanism, side effects)

A

Tacrolimus .1% ointment and Pimecrolimus 1% cream.
Topical substitute for MP steroids.
Supposed to be used for atopic dermatitis in age 2+, but often also used for seborrheic dermatitis, contact dermatitis, psoriasis, vitligo, etc.
Act by inhibiting transcription of pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-2.
Do not cause atrophy. Rare burning effects or lymphoma.
Avoid prolonged use. Good alternative when rebound occurs in eyelid dermatitis.

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13
Q

When are systemic corticosteroids used? How are they delivered?

A

Used for severe or systemic diseases, such as pemphigus vulgaris, severe atopic dermatitis, poison ivy, or acne fulminans.
May be delivered orally (po, Prednisone most common), injected (IV, intralesional [IL], or intramuscular [IM]), or inhaled.
Injections are good for diseases w/ fibrosis / thickenings.
IV / oral good for pemphigus vulgaris w/ lots of pain / lesions.

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14
Q

Intralesional injections (type, use, side effects)

A

Include triamcinolone. Good for localized disease such as alopecia areata and keloids. Side effect includes epidermal / dermal atrophy.

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15
Q

Side effects of systemic corticosteroids

A

Osteoporosis (long-term), osteonecrosis (may occur quickly, often in hip), HPA suppression (must taper steroids if used for more than 3 weeks), infection (due to immunosuppresion).

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16
Q

Poison Ivy (cause, sxs, tx)

A

Allergic contact dermatitis → vesicles and bullae.
Reacts w/in 2 days if sensitized.
Wash skin, clothes, and tools. Tx w/ topical or oral corticosteroids for 3 weeks.
Resin takes a long time to get out of the skin.