CV Drugs 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main cause of CV disease?

A

Atherosclerosis

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2
Q

Draw the CV disease continuum, showing the relationship bw each other

A

Other risk factors -> endothelial dysfunction HTN -> stroke
| /
Atherosclerosis -> thrombosis
| | \
Angina. ACS. —> HF
| |
Arrhythmias & sudden C death

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3
Q

What’s the main effect of statins?

Mechanism of action?

A

Important in lowering cholesterol - driver of Atherosclerosis

In the liver, Statins block the rate-limiting enzyme (HMG-CoA reductase) involves in synthesis of cholesterol

(Also as a result causes Chol to be taken up into the liver from plasma)

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4
Q

Atorvastatin drug profile

A
  • Rapid absorption & high 1st pass metabolism; some metabolites are also active against HMG-CoA reductase
  • reaches its peak plasma conc in 1-2 hrs, and almost entirely bound to proteins in blood
  • Half life ~ 14hrs, but activity against enzyme lasts 20-30hrs
  • Excreted mainly into the bile
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5
Q

What is HTN?

A

An elevation of systolic and/or diastolic BP to the point where it increases the risk of CV disease.

~30% of population

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6
Q

Name the different stages

A

PreHTN: 80-90 and/or 130-139
Stage 1: 90-99 and/or 140-159
Stage 2:
Stage 3: > 110 and/or > 180

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7
Q

Major risk factors as a result of HTN?

A

Stroke
CAD
cHF

Very important to treat high BP because could also could damage to target organs

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8
Q

Diagnosis + assessment of HTN

A

Measure BP using Sphygmomanometer

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9
Q

Types of HTN

A

Primary - no identifiable cause in the patient (majority of cases)

Secondary - cause can be identified (minority)

Hypertensinogenic factors: primary or secondary?
-obesity, insulin resistance

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10
Q

Pathophysiology of primary HTN.

What is it that drives your BP up?

A

A lot of what increases these factors is driven by

Sympathetic and renin/ angiotensin/ aldosterone systems

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11
Q

BP formula

A

BP = CO*TPR

HTN represents a disorder of the processes which regulate long-term BP

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12
Q

Normal feedback control of Arterial BP

A

Regulatory systems:
Decrease in Firing of sympathetic neurons
Inhibition of RAAS

Renal component…

Vascular component…

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13
Q

What is the implication of the current concepts of long term BP regulation?

A

Successful lowering of BP requires the sustained reduction of blood volume and/or vascular tone.

All of the drugs used do one or the other. All (except b1 receptor blockers) have vasodilation effect and all (except a1 receptor blockers? + K+ channel agonists) have natriuretic effect.

Some have direct Decrease of CO effect (b1 receptor blockers + some Ca channel blockers)

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