L4 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the uses of neuromuscular blockers?

A

Muscle relaxants - intubation, surgery
Muscle paralysis - botox
Ortho

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2
Q

Describe the structure of the NMJ

A

Pre-synapse w/ active zones
Basal lamina w/ AChE
Post-synapse w/ dense nAChR
Peri-jxnal Na+ channels deep in synaptic folds

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3
Q

What are the 2 forms of botulinum toxin?

A

Both work to disrupt the SNARE proteins for vesicle fusion to release ACh at NMJ
BoNT A = botox, cleaves SNAP 25
BoNT B = myobloc, cleaves synaptobrevin

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4
Q

4 clinical uses of botulinum toxins

A
  1. Strabismus = misaligned eyes
  2. Excessive sweating
  3. Cervical dystonia (head twisting)
  4. Cosmetic
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5
Q

What is the structure of AChR?

A

Ion channel - Na/K
5 subunits: 2 alpha, beta, delta, gamma or epsilon (development)
ACh binds alpha subunit - need 2 AChs
Therefore blockers that bind 1 alpha inactivate the entire receptor

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6
Q

5 non-depol NM blockers

A
  1. d-Tubocurarine
  2. Pancuronium
  3. Vecuronium
  4. Cisatracurium
  5. Rocuronium
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7
Q

1 depolarizing NM blocker & metabolism

A

Succinyl choline

Hydrolyzed (aka metabolized) by BChE

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8
Q

Mechanism of non-depol NM blockers

A

Works by competitively blocking nAChR
See:
- ↓mepp & epp - proportionally

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9
Q

Why are non-depol NM blockers competitive blockers?

A

With repeated stimulation, see temporal summation

- ↑ACh in synapse yields larger and large depol - adds with each release to eventually reach threshold

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10
Q

Mechanism of depol NM blockers

A

Na channel inactivation
Binds nAChR - causing depol - then inactivates it
- Add drug slowly to suppress initial depol from happening all at once
If stim nerve, still get epps but don’t reach threshold b/c not opening any channels

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11
Q

What is the train of 4 stimulation

A

Tests depth of NM block

Fade = muscle twitch starts high then fades in correlation to the degree to which the non-depol is blocking

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12
Q

What does recovery from an NM block look like?

A

Looks like a train of 4
Starts high - goes low
See net amplitude grow with recovery until all twitches return to same baseline amplitude

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13
Q

NM blocker toxicity - what are 3 things you’re worried about

A
  1. Breathing - toxic level will arrest diaphragm muscle too
  2. Stimulating histamine release
  3. Inducing malignant hyperthermia
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14
Q

Can NM blockers cross BBB?

A

No - all charged
Also why can’t give PO - poor tissue penetration
Give IV

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15
Q

Babies response to NM blockers

A

More sen to ND blockers (use less)
Less sen D
B/c of how NMJ matures

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16
Q

Hypothermic response to NM blockers

A

Less sen to ND blocker
More sen to D
Lower temp = less efficient ATPase = membrane potential is more positive than normal (closer to threshold)

17
Q

Genetic variant that would dictate NM blocker response

A

BChE variants for succinylcholine metabolism

18
Q

Which electrolytes should you be aware of affecting the NMJ/NM blockers?

A

Ca2+

K

19
Q

Hypokalemia response to NM blockers

A

Hyperpolarized
More sen to ND
Less sen to D

20
Q

Hyperkalemia response to NM blocker

A

Closer to threshold
Less sen to ND
More sen to D

21
Q

Which pts might be hypovolemic? How does this effect NM blockers?

A

Burn & trauma
Artificial hyperkalemia
DON’T use succinylcholine

22
Q

How do MG pts respond to NM blockers?

A

Fewer nAChR there b/c autoimmune attack
BUT whatever is there is hypersensitized
VERY sen to ND blockers (acts directly on receptor)

23
Q

How do pts with small cell (bronchiogenic) carcinoma respond to NM blockers?

A

No Ca2+ channels on pre-synaptic side
Less vesicle fusion –> less ACh release
Sen to BOTH ND and D

24
Q

How do pts with liver disease respond to NM blockers? Which 3 NM blocker are specifically effected?

A

Liver makes less BChE

Decrease SuCh, vecuronium, rocuronium metab

25
Q

What is malignant hyperthermia?

A

@ muscle: rapid release SR Ca2+ for no reason

Heat production via ATP - rapid rise body temp

26
Q

Which NM blocker can induce underlying malignant hyperthermia?

A

SuCh

27
Q

What is the difference between neurotransmission at the NMJ vs ganglia

A
NMJ = 1:1
Ganglia = temporal & spatial summation
28
Q

Which receptors create fast EPSP

A

nAChR

29
Q

Which receptors create slow IPSPs

A

mAChR

30
Q

2 ganglionic blocking agents

A

Mecamylamine

Trimethaphan

31
Q

What happens with ganglionic blockade?

A

Reverse the dominant autonomic tone of that organ - opposite of normal baseline
Ex: heart becomes tachycardic w/ ↑CO (baseline = para)