Acute Coronary Syndrome Medications Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three classes of early hospital therapy for acute coronary syndromes (ACS)?

A
  1. Anti-Ischemic Therapy
  2. Antiplatelet Therapy
  3. Anticoagulant Therapy
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2
Q

When is oxygen therapy recommended?

A

Patients with a PaO2 of <90 percent, in respiratory distress, or those with other high risk features for hypoxemia

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3
Q

When is sublingual vs IV nitroglycerin given?

A

Sublingual - initially, i.e. in the ambulance, up to three tablets
IV - for ongoing ischemia, hypertension, or heart failure in the hospital

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4
Q

What is the mechanism of action of nitroglycerin? Does it affect preload / afterload? Does it work quickly?

A

Metabolized to NO which increases cGMP grump, dephosphorylating MLCK, inducing smooth muscle relaxation and vasodilation

  • > especially affects the venous system -> reduction in preload and systemic vascular resistance (afterload)
  • > may also dilate coronary vessels slightly

Works quickly -> a few minutes if taken sublingually

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5
Q

What are the contraindications for nitroglycerin? There are four, three were covered in sketchy, the other is intuitive, but be specific about it.

A
  1. Hypotension (SBP < 90 mmHg) -> avoid when this may be possible, as it will worsen this
  2. Right ventricular infarction -> reduction in preload may cause cardiogenic shock (think of sketchy no right turn sign)
  3. Aortic stenosis -> Need the preload into the left heart to maintain blood flow -> think of the curled smokestack in sketchy
  4. Phosphodiesterase inhibitors (PDE5) taken within the last 24 hours -> i.e. sildenafil -> fill = coal truck in sketchy
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6
Q

What are the beta blockers of choice for ACS? How quickly should they be started? What types should be used?

A

Cardioselective agents: Metoprolol and Atenolol
Should be started within 24 hours

Early: Use short-acting and low dose, titrating upwards for tighter control
Discharge: Give long-acting beta blockers

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7
Q

When should IV beta blockers be used?

A

When in a hypertensive emergency (SBP > 200) or patients in atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response (need to slow conduction at the AV node)

Otherwise, contraindicated for all the reasons on the next card

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8
Q

What are the contraindications for beta-blockers?

A
  1. Active bronchospasm - i.e. asthmatics
  2. Severe bradycardia - will slow further
  3. Heart block greater than 1st degree (unless have pacemaker)
  4. Pulmonary edema -> don’t want to slow heart further in HF
  5. Hypotension
  6. MI due to cocaine use -> unopposed alpha1 can cause coronary artery vasospasm and extreme HTN
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9
Q

What other drug should be considered if betablockers are contraindicated?

A

non-DHP calcium channel blockers

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10
Q

When should statin therapy be started? Which is recommended?

A

At time of diagnosis: atorvastatin or rosuvastatin is recommended (longer half lives)

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11
Q

When are ACE inhibitors recommended in ACS?

A

For heart failure of EF <40% - will help relieve the fluid overload

Not needed if EF > 40%

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12
Q

What should be given to patients if they are intolerant to an ACE inhibitor?

A

ARBs - i.e. losartan or valsartan

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13
Q

Why are amlodipine and nefedipime contraindicated in most ACS patients?

A

Without already being on a beta-blocker, they will cause reflex tachycardia. Also, they don’t really help

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14
Q

When should NSAIDs and COX-2 inhibitors be given in ACS?

A

I tricked you -> they shouldnt. Only aspirin is okay, otherwise they are contraindicated.

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15
Q

What is the mechanism of action of aspirin, and why is it given at low doses daily on discharge?

A

IRREVERSIBLY inhibits COX-1 (why it is okay vs other NSAIDs)

Low doses -> blocks TXA2 synthesis by platelets, without having a significant effect on the vasodilator prostacyclin (PGI2)

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16
Q

How should a patient coming in with ACS be treated with aspirin?

A

An initial loading dose of 2-4 baby aspirins (81mg each) should be given, via chewing an uncoated pill
-> rapid antithrombic effect due to almost complete inhibition of TXA2

17
Q

When is aspirin contraindicated?

A

In patients >60 years of age with peptic ulcer bleeding

18
Q

What receptor do the ADP receptor blockers block? What are the relevant ones’ names?

A

P2Y12 -> think 2-12 year olds playing baseball

-grel = grilling hot dogs, all of these drugs will have a grel in them

Clopidogrel
Prasugrel
Ticagrelor

19
Q

What is the recommendation for P2Y12 therapy in ACS?

A

At least one YEAR of dual antiplatelet therapy with aspirin + P2Y12 receptor blocker in ACS.

20
Q

What is the dosing of clopidogrel dosing?

A

300 mg loading dose + 75 mg maintenance dose daily afterward (same as aspirin, 4x normal dose)

21
Q

Why would prasugrel be used rather than clopidogrel?

A
  1. More rapid onset
  2. Higher degree of inhibition
  3. Some patients are clopidogrel resistant based on ADP receptor polymorphisms
22
Q

How does ticagrelor differ from prasugrel? How is it similar?

A

Differs - binds REVERSIBLY -> clopidogrel and prasugrel are irreversible

Similar - rapid onset, more intense inhibition, same contraindications

23
Q

When are prasugrel / ticagrelor contraindicated?

A

Prior TIA or stroke

>75 years of age (elderly)

24
Q

When are GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors used? Which one is recommended?

A

Used for patients undergoing early cardiac catheterization to prevent thrombus formation

Eptifibatide - think TIED score in sketchy

Preferred over abciximab or TIrofiban - “tie”

25
Q

What are the anticoagulant therapies of choice for early hospital care in ACS?

A
  1. Unfractionated heparin
  2. Enoxaparin (think of the pair of foxes held by fido for fondaparinux or enoxaparin)
    - > inhibit the factor Xa fox
26
Q

What is the mechanism of action of bivalirudin?

A

Think of the gator about to eat the beaver, with the sign no intRUDIN

Argatroban and dibigatran are direct thrombin (beaver) inhibitors, bivalirudin is also a direct thrombin inhibitor

27
Q

When are ACE inhibitors or ARBs recommended for secondary prevention? What numbers do you have to pay attention to?

A

CHF, EF < 40% (like in ACS), but also hypertension and DM (good for nephropathy)

Make sure the patient K+ is <5.0 mEq/L and Creatinine Clearance is >30 mL/min if giving with spironolactone

28
Q

What is the typical secondary prevention therapy for ACS?

A
  1. Dual therapy for 1 year: aspirin / P2Y12
  2. Beta blockers
  3. Ace inhibitor / ARB - if indicated
  4. Statin
  5. Standard risk factor management
29
Q

When should anticoagulants like heparin and enoxaparin be considered?

A

Only in thrombus related NSTEMI -> not indicated for STEMI