Drug Table Flashcards

1
Q

2 MAO-B selective Inhibitors:

A
  • Selegiline

- Rasagiline

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2
Q

MAOI + ___ –> Hypertensive Crisis

MAOI + ___ –> Serotonin Syndrome

A
  • Tyramine

- SSRI

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3
Q

2 COMT inhibitors:

A
  • Entacapone

- Tolcapone

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4
Q

1st line treatment for Parkinson’s (Combo)

A

Levodopa + Carbidopa (limit peripheral conversion)

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5
Q

Only drug for Huntington’s Chorea

Mechanism?

A

Tetrabenzine

-prevent monoamine release

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6
Q

What class can cause TD, EPS, NMS?

A

Antipsychotics

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7
Q

Drug with most metabolic risk of all antipsychotics:

A

Clozapine

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8
Q

Common mechanism of all antipsychotics

A

D2 receptor antagonism

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9
Q

Additional mechanism of 2nd gen ‘Atypical’ antipsychotics:

A

5HT2a receptor antagonism

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10
Q

2 Groups of 2nd gen antipsychotics and their side effects:

A

‘Pines’ –> sedation

‘Dones’ –> EPS

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11
Q

What is EPS:

A

Extrapyramidal symptoms: drug-induced movement disorders

  1. Dystonia: continuous spasm, muscle contractions
  2. Akathisia: motor restlesness
  3. Parkinsonism: rigidity, bradykinesia, tremor
  4. Tardive dyskinesia: jerky, irregular
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12
Q

Drug used to diagnose myasthenia gravis

A

Edrophonium

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13
Q

Drug used to confirm Horner’s Syndrome

A

Cocaine

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14
Q

Prostaglandin analog mechanism of action:

A

Increase uveoscleral outflow

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15
Q

Carbonic anhydrase inhibitor mechanism of action:

A

Reduce aquous humor production

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16
Q

Lithium uses

A
  • Anti-manic
  • Mood-stabilizing (bipolar)
  • Long-term Cluster headache prevention
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17
Q

Antidote for methanol and ethylene glycol poisoning

A

Fomepizole - blocks alcohol dehydrogenase

18
Q

Hallucinogen mechanism of action:

A

5HT2a receptor agonist

19
Q

Fluoxetine and Paroxetine side effects not shared w/ other SSRIs:

A

Potent P450 inhibition

20
Q

2 Atypical Antidepressants and their mechanisms:

A

Buproprion: NDRI
Mirtazapine: 5HT2a antagonist, SRI

21
Q

2 Major active metabolites of morphine

A

M6 (more potent/active)

M3 (little affinity)

22
Q

3 Common opioid side effects:

A
  1. Miosis
  2. Constipation
  3. Respiratory depression
23
Q

Opioid mechanism of action:

A

Mu- opioid receptor agonist

24
Q

Opiods w/ GI effect:

A

Loperamide

Diphenoxylate

25
Q

Synthetic codeine analog:

A

Tramadol

26
Q

Opioid antagonists:

A

Naloxone

Naltrexone

27
Q

Benzodiazepine mechanism of action:

A

GABAa agonist: binding between a1 and y2 subunits

28
Q

Benzo w/ shortest half-life:

A

Midazolam, 1.9 hours

29
Q

Benzo used to prevent alcohol withdrawl symptoms:

A

Lorazepam

30
Q

Benzo used to induce sleep:

A

Triazolam

31
Q

Benzodiazepine antidote:

A

Flumazenil

32
Q

2 Barbituate drugs:

A

Thiopental

Phenobarbitol

33
Q

Anxiolytic without marked sedation

A

Busiprone

34
Q

[Benzodiazepines/Barbituates] have life-threatening withdrawal symptoms

A

Barbituates (and alcohol)

35
Q

Nitrous Oxide mechanism

A

NMDA receptor antagonist

36
Q

What is Propofol infusion syndrome?

A

IV infusion for several days –>

  1. Metabolic acidosis
  2. Rhabdomyolysis
  3. Heart and renal failure
  4. Lower BP
  5. Bradycardia
  6. Death
37
Q

Rocuronium mechanism and antidote

A

Competitive ACh blocker (non-depolarizing)

Sugammadex - complexes w/ rocuronium

38
Q

What is Hofman elimination?

A

Spontaneous, non-enzymatic degradation

39
Q

2 Types of local anesthetics

A
  • ‘Esters’

- ‘Amides’

40
Q

Local anesthetic with highest cardiac toxicity potential

A

Bupivicaine