Chapter 18 Flashcards

1
Q

Alpha 1 Receptors

A

located in: blood vessels, eye, bladder and prostate

Increases force of heart contraction,
vasoconstriction increases blood pressure;
mydriasis (dilation of pupils)
decreases secretion in salivary glands
increased urinary bladder relaxation and urinary sphincter contraction

when these receptors are stimulated, arterioles and venules constrict, increasing blood return to the heart circulation improves and blood pressure increases. too much stimulation however, means blood flow is decreased to the vital organs

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2
Q

Alpha 2 Recptors

location and effects

A

located in: postganglionic nerve endings

inhibits release of norepinephrine
dilates blood vessels
produces hypotension
decreases GI motility and tone

remember: inhibits NORGI

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3
Q

Beta 1 receptors

A

primarily Heart but also Kidney

increases heart rate and force of contraction
increases renin secretion–> increases angiotensin, which increases BP

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4
Q

Beta 2 receptors

A

located in: Skeletal Muscles, GI, Uterus, Liver, Lungs
SMGULL

increase blood flow in skeletal muscles, promotes GI and uterine relaxation, promotes increase in blood sugar through glycogenolysis in liver, dilates bronchioles

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5
Q

where are alpha adrenergic receptors located?

A

in blood vessels, eye, bladder, and prostate

alpha = number 1

giant eye (bc strongest and number one) with blood vessels sticking out bc mad, with enlarged bladder bc really needs to pee

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6
Q

transmitters are inactivated 3 different ways

A
  1. reputake of the transmitter back into the neuron
  2. enzymatic degradation or transformation
  3. diffusion away fromt he receptor
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7
Q

the two enzymes that inactivate norepinephrine are

A
monamine oxidase (MAO) found INSIDE the neuron and
catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) found OUTSIDE the neuron
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8
Q

direct-acting sympathomimetics

e.g.?

A

directly stimulate the adrenergic receptor

e.g. norepinephrine or epinephrine

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9
Q

indirect acting sympathomimetics do what?

e.g.?

A

simulate the release of NE from the nerve endings

e.g. amphetamine

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10
Q

mixed acting sympathomimetics

e.g.?

A

both direct and indirect, they stimulate the adrenergic receptor sites and stimulate the release of norepinephrine

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11
Q

threee types of sympathomimetic drugs which DIRECTLY stimulate the adrenergic receptor (e.g. ep or norepi)

A
  1. direct acting
  2. indirect acting
  3. mixed acting
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12
Q

catecholamines

A

the chemical structure of a substance that produces a sympathomimetic response

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13
Q

endogenous catecholamines

A

epinephrine, norepinephrine, and dopamine

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14
Q

synthetic catecholamines

A

isoproterenol and dobutamine

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15
Q

noncatecholamines

A

phenyleprhine, metaproterenol, albuterol

they stimulate the adrenergic receptors and have a longer duration of action that endogenous or sympathetic

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16
Q

epinephrine is (selective/nonselective) and works on which receptors?

A

nonselective, alpha 1, alpha 2, beta 1, beta 2

17
Q
Albuterol
class
therapeutic use/effect
MOA: 
contraindications:
side effects:
A

class: beta2 adrenergic agonist
therapeutic use/effect: treats broncho-spasm, asthma, bronchitis, other COPD
MOA: stimulates beta2-adrenergic receptors to relax the bronchial smooth muscles, causing broncho-dilation
contraindications: cardiac disrrhythmias, coronary artery disease
side effects: tremor, dizziness, nervousness, pharyngitis, nasal congestion, insomnia, weakness, diarrhea

18
Q
Epinephrine
class:
therapeutic use/effect:
MOA: 
contraindications:
side effects:
A

class: adrenergic agonist
therapeutic use/effect: treats allergic reactions, anaphylaxis, asthma, bronchospasm, severe hypotension, cardiac arrest
MOA: acts on both alpha and beta receptors, does ALL THE THINGS, promotes CNS and cardiac stimulation and broncho-dilation, strengthens cardiac contraction, increases cardiac rate and output; reduces mucosal congestion by inhibiting histamine release; reverses anaphylactic reactions
contraindications: cardiac tachydysrhythmias, cerebral arteriosclerosis, pregnancy, narrow angle glaucoma
side effects: anorexia, nausea, vomiting, nervousness, tremors

19
Q
class:
therapeutic use/effect:
MOA: 
contraindications:
side effects:
A
class
therapeutic use/effect
MOA: 
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20
Q
class:
therapeutic use/effect:
MOA: 
contraindications:
side effects:
A
class
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MOA: 
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21
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class:
therapeutic use/effect:
MOA: 
contraindications:
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A
class
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22
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class:
therapeutic use/effect:
MOA: 
contraindications:
side effects: 6
A
class
therapeutic use/effect
MOA: 
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23
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class
therapeutic use/effect
MOA: 
contraindications:
side effects:
A
class
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24
Q
Atenelol
class:
therapeutic use/effect:
MOA: 
contraindications:
side effects:
A

CLASS: beta1 adrenergic blocker
THER USE: treats hypertension, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction, and heart failure
MOA: selectively blocks beta1 adrenergic receptor sites, decreases sympathetic outflow to the periphery, suppresses renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
CONTRA: sinus bradycardia, heart block > first degree, cardiogenic shock, pulmonary edema, acute bronchospasm, uncompensated cardiac failure, pregnancy, lactation
SIDE EFFECTS/ADVERSE REACTIONS: bradycardia, hypotension, heart failure, masking of hypoglycemia

25
Q

adrenergic blockers are used mainly to treat

A

hypertension