Adrenergic Receptor Agonists Flashcards

1
Q

Phenylephrine (Neo-Synephrine*)

A

Alpha-1 selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Activate alpha adrenergic receptors on vascular smooth muscle–> increase BP and TPR

Activate beta receptors only at higher conc

Clinical indications: antihypotensive (hypotension, orthostatic hypotension, shock), paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, nasal decongestant, mydriatic

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2
Q

Clonidine (Catapres)
alpha-methydopa (Aldomet
)
Apraclonidine (Lodipine)
Brimonidine (Alphagan
)

A

alpha 2- selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Action: activate central alpha 2 receptors–>decrease central sympathetic outflow–> decrease BP; decrease aqueous humor production–>decrease intraocular pressure

Clinical use: systemic hypertension, glaucoma

Adverse effects: dry mouth, sedation, hypotension

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3
Q

Metaproterenol (Metaprel*)

A

Beta 2-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Resistant to methylation by COMT

Clinical use: long-term treatment of COPD, asthma, acute bronchospasm

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4
Q

Terbutaline (Bricanyl*)

A

Beta 2-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Not substrate for COMT methylation

Clinical use: long-term treatment of COPD, acute bronchospasm, emergency treatment of status asthmaticus (IV)

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5
Q

Albuterol (Ventolin, Slabutamol)

A

Beta 2-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Effects on bronchospasm (dilate smooth muscle) similar to those of terbutaline, oral use, delay preterm labor

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6
Q

Ritodrine (Yutopar*)

A

Beta 2-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Developed specifically for uterine relaxant: arrest premature labor, prolong pregnancy

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7
Q

Beta 2-selective adrenergic receptor agonists: adverse effects

A

tachycardia: pts with coronary artery disease or preexisting arrhythmias–>higher risk; increased risk if MAO inhibitors are used (allow 2-wk elapse)

Increase plasma glucose, lactate, and FFA

Decrease plasma K+–>important in pts with cardiac disease taking digoxin and diuretics

Less likely with inhalation therapy than with parenteral or oral therapy

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8
Q

Fenoldopam (Corlopam*)

A

D1-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

some stimulation of alpha 2 adrenoceptors–>feedback inhibition of NE release

Effects: renal, mesenteric, peripheral, and coronary vasodilation; renal blood flow is maintained and natriuresis is promoted

Clinical use: hypertensive crisis

Side effect: hypotension

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9
Q

Isoproterenol (Isuprel*)

A

Non-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Powerful agonist of all beta receptors (no effect on alpha)

Effects: decrease peripheral resistance, increase HR (arrhythmias), increase myocardial contractility, bronchodilation

Clinical use: bradycardia, AV block, Torsades de pointes

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10
Q

Dobutamine (Dobutrex*)

A

Non-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Acts in Beta 1, alpha 2, and Beta2 but mostly Beta 1

Effects: positive inotropic effect on heart, positive chronotropic effect (SA node automaticity, AV conduction), TPR not affected (alpha 1 and beta 1 balance)

Adverse effects: excessive increase in BP & HR, increased ventricular response rate in pts with A-fib, ventricular ectopic activity, increase size of MI, tolerance

Clinical use: short term treatment of cardiac failure, long term efficacy remains uncertain, stress test

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11
Q

Epinephrine (Adrenaline*)

A

Non-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Dose and route dependent
Small dose: Beta 1= increase pulse pressure, HR, SV, and CO; Beta 2= decrease TPR
Moderate dose: Beta 1= increase HR, SV, CO, and PP; Beta 2: decrease TPR, DBP; alpha 1: increase TPR, BP
High Dose: alpha 1= increase TPR, BP; potential reflex bradycardia; Beta 1= increase HR, SV, CO, PP; Beta 2= decrease TPR, DBP
Subcutaneous: slow absorption, vasoconstriction

**Epinephrine reversal phenomenon

Different rxns in different vascular beds–>redistribution of blood flow

Adverse effects: headache, tremor, palpitations, cerebral hemorrhage (large dose), cardiac arrhythmias, angina in pts with coronary artery disease

Contraindications: pts using nonselective beta blockers

Clinical use: hypersensitivity rxns (anaphylaxis), cardiac arrest, local anesthetics, post-extubation croup, viral croup

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12
Q

Norepinephrine

A

Non-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

Beta 1>alpha»»Beta 2

Effects: increase SBP, DBP, PP, coronary flow, TPR; decreases cardiac output, renal blood flow, splanchnic, and hepatic flow

Adverse effects: similar to epinephrine, greater elevation of BP

Clinical use: low blood pressure (dose titration)

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13
Q

Dopamine

A

Non-selective adrenergic receptor agonist

D1, D2, Beta 1, alpha 1
Ineffective when administered orally

Dose dependent:
Low dose: D2= decrease NE release, alpha adrenergics, stimulation of VSMcs; D1= vasodilation, increase GFR, RBF, Na+ filtration; D1 (renal)= increase proximal, Henle loop [cAMP], decrease Na+-K+ ATPase, Na+ reabsorption
Moderate dose: (+) inotropic effect (Beta 1), release of NE from nerve terminals, tachycardia, increase SBP and PP, no effect on DB or increases slightly, TPR balanced
High dose: vasoconstriction (alpha 1)

**Correct hypovolemia before dopamine use

Adverse effects: tachycardia, anginal pain, arrhythmias, headache, hypertension, extravasation (ischemic necrosis and sloughing

Contraindication: MAO inhibitor or tricyclic antidepressant

Clinical Use: congestive heart failure, cardiogenic and septic shock, acutely improve cardiac and renal function in severely ill

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14
Q

Ephedrine (Ephedrine* Ephedra*)

A

Mix-acting adrenergic receptor agonist

Indirectly release NE and directly activate receptor

Orally active sympathomimetic drug, found in ma-huang
High bioavailability and long duration of action
Mild CNS stimulant
Pseudoephedrine is used as decongestant

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15
Q

Amphetamine

A

Indirect acting symathothmimetic amines

Structurally related to NE–>transported by NET1–> displace NE–>NE release independent of exocytosis

Activity affected by rxn affecting storage (reserpine, MAOI, NET1 inhibitors)

Effects: release biogenic amines; stimulate medullary respiratory center; stimulate cortex & reticular activating system–>prevent fatigue, delays need for sleep; tx obesity; activates peripheral alpha ad beta; increases SBP, DBP, & HR; cardiac arrhythmias may occur; increase bladder sphincter contraction–>Tx enuresis & incontinence

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16
Q

Tyramine

A

Indirectly acting sympathomimetic amines

Used to synthesize NE and EPI via alternative pathway
Destroyed by MAO in gut wall and liver

Action by MAOI–>ingestion of tyramine-rich food (fermented cheese)–>sudden and dangerous rise in BP

17
Q

Pargyline

Entacapone

A

Indirect-acting

MAO/COMT inhibitors

18
Q

Cocaine

A

Indirect-acting uptake inhibitor

Inhibits uptake of NE and epi by inhibiting NET–> more NE and epi in synapse