L3 Flashcards

1
Q

What kind of enzyme are cholinesterases?

A

Serine hydrolases

+ H2O to ester bond –> splits substrate

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2
Q

Which cholinesterase has activity towards acetyl-B-methylcholine?

A

AChE

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3
Q

Which cholinesterase is active against benzoylcholine & succinylcholine?

A

BChE

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4
Q

Can AChE or BChE be recovered by pralidoxime?

A

AChE

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5
Q

Where do you find AChE?

A

Nerve terminals
Muscle
RBCs

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6
Q

Where do you find BChE?

A

Plasma
Liver
Muscle
Brain

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7
Q

Inhibiting AChE or BChE can be fatal?

A

AChE

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8
Q

What are the 2 categories of reversible AChE inhibitors?

A

Mechanism - cleaved like ACh but serine active grp stays stable in the active site for some period of time

  1. Quaternary amines - reverses in seconds
    - Edrophonium
  2. Carbamates - reverses in minds
    - Neostigmine
    - Physostigmine
    - Pyridostigmine
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9
Q

What is the irreversible AChE inhibitor? What does irreversible mean in this context?

A

Organophosphates - covalent bond formed with the enzyme so reverses slowly (hrs or days)

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10
Q

What would be the side effects of too much AChE inhibitors?

A

Excess ACh = para overstim = SLUDGE

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11
Q

Which drug would you use for paralytic ileus and bladder atony?

A

Neostigmine = block AChE
+
Bethanechol = M agonist
Inject to keep local - avoid non-selective problems (SLUDGE)

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12
Q

Which eye disease do you use anti-AChEs with muscarinic agonists for?

A

Glaucoma (NOT narrow angle)
Ex: physostigmine + pilocarpine
Increase ACh to M3 receptors - stretch iris = better fluid drainage

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13
Q

Why do you use anti-AChEs for MG? Which ones?

A

Neo or pyridostigmine

Increase ACh avail at NMJ where Nm have been destroyed by auto-immunity

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14
Q

What must you give with anti-AChEs for MG pts?

A

Anti-muscarinic

To avoid overstim para

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15
Q

What type of poisoning would you give anti-AChEs as therapy for?

A

Anti-muscarinic or nicotinic poisoning

Goal = try to increase ACh to competitively dislodge

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16
Q

Which anti-AChE do you give with anti-muscarinics to recover from neuromuscular block after surg? Why?

A

Neostigmine

Compete to dislodge the blocker!

17
Q

How are anti-A/BChE drugs metabolized and excreted?

A

Metabolized by esterases
Excreted in urine
- Unconj
- Conj to sulfate or glucuronide

18
Q

Contraindications for anti-AChE treatment

A

Same as M agonists

  • Bronchial asthma
  • Peptic ulcer
  • Coronary insuff
  • Hyperthyroidism
19
Q

How are anti-AChEs used in a non-medical setting?

A

Pesticides

- Organophosphate insecticides require bioactivation

20
Q

How do nerve agents like sarin gas work?

A

Organophosphates
Very hydrophobic –> penetrate skin easily
Large ACh block throughout the body with small dose

21
Q

What is aging exhibited by nerve agent organophosphates?

A

Remains with AChE and changes during that time so can’t be displaced by PRALIDOXIME (2 PAM)
The enzyme is perm damaged - have to wait for liver to resynthesize more to regain fxn

22
Q

How do you try to treat nerve agents?

A

2 PAM and atropine injection