Respiratory Flashcards

1
Q

Salbutamol: Indications

A

Asthma: SABA or LABA w. corticosteroid
COPD
Hyperkalaemia

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2
Q

Salbutamol: Mechanism of Action

A

GPCR mediated smooth muscle relaxation

Also stimulate Na+/K+ ATPase so shift K+ to intracellular compartment

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3
Q

Salbutamol: Adverse Effects

A

Relate to stimulation of B receptors in other systems: palpitations, tachycardia, anxiety, tremor
Can also cause hyperglycaemia and muscle cramps

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4
Q

Salbutamol: Warnings and Interactions

A

LABA alone is associated with an increase in asthma deaths
Take care in patients with CVD, due to the risk of tachycardia and arrhythmia
Can reduce the effectiveness of B agonists

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5
Q

Salbutamol: Prescription

A
SABA inhaled as needed 
Given by nebuliser acutely
LABA used twice daily in combination inhaler e.g. symbicort
Monitoring by serial PEFR measurement
Check inhaler technique
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6
Q

Anti-Muscarinics (ipatropium, tiotropium): Indications

A

COPD (short acting e.g. tipatropium as needed, long acting e.g. ipatropium for prevention)
Asthma

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7
Q

Anti-Muscarinics (ipatropium, tiotropium): Mechansim of Action

A

Competitively inhibit ACh so reduce parasympathetic tone. This causes smooth muscle relaxation and a reduction in glandular secretions

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8
Q

Anti-Muscarinics (ipatropium, tiotropium): Adverse Effects

A

Very few as there is little systemic absorption

Can cause dry mouth

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9
Q

Anti-Muscarinics (ipatropium, tiotropium): Warnings and Interactions

A

Can cause a risk in intraocular pressure so could affect closed angle glaucoma
Caution in patients at risk of arrhythmia
In practice, they can usually be inhaled by these patients with few issues
Interactions not generally an issue as they are inhaled

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10
Q

Anti-Muscarinics (ipatropium, tiotropium): Prescription

A

Inhaler or nebuliser (for acute treatment)
LAMA once daily
Advise about dry mouth: chew gum, suck sweets
Check inhaler technique
Monitor symptoms and PEFR measurements in asthmatics

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11
Q

Corticosteroids, inhaled (beclometasone, budesonide): Indications

A

Asthma (Step 2 treatment)

COPD

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12
Q

Corticosteroids, inhaled (beclometasone, budesonide): Mechanism of Action

A

They are steroids, so the pass through the cell membrane and act on nuclear receptors. They alter the transcription of a variety of genes related to inflammation. Interleukins, cytokines and chemokine are down regulates, and anti-inflammatory proteins are up regulates. This reduces mucosal inflammation and mucus secretion and widens the airway.

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13
Q

Corticosteroids, inhaled (beclometasone, budesonide): Adverse Effects

A

Local effects: Immunosuppression, so candida infection can occur. Hoarse voice,
Systemic (rare, only at high doses because of low systemic absorption): adrenal suppression, growth retardation, osteoporosis.

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14
Q

Corticosteroids, inhaled (beclometasone, budesonide): Warnings and Interactoins

A

Caution in children (growth suppression) and COPD patients with a history of pneumonia
They have no clinically significant interactions

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15
Q

Corticosteroids, inhaled (beclometasone, budesonide): Prescription

A

Usually twice daily by inhaler
Inhaler technique should be taught and assessed.
Monitored by symptoms, and PEFR in asthma

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16
Q

Oxygen: Indications

A

Increase tissue oxygen delivery in hyperaemia
Speed up reabsorption of gas in pneumothorax
Reduce half life of carboxyhemoglobin in CO poisoning

17
Q

Oxygen: Mechanism of Action

A

Increased PaO2
Decreased alveolar N2 concentration, to pleural gas is reabsorbed and breathed out quicker
Competes with CO to bind to Hb

18
Q

Oxygen: Adverse Effects

A

Discomfort from mask

Dry throat

19
Q

Oxygen: Warnings and Interactions

A

Patients with chronic T2 respiratory failure and CO2 retention (e.g. COPD) may experience respiratory depression if the O2 saturation gets too high
It should not be exposed to heat of flame as it accelerates combustion

20
Q

Oxygen: Prescription

A

Monitor by spO2 and ABG measurements
Target 94 to 98% in healthy people
Target 88 to 92% in COPD