NSAIDS Flashcards

1
Q

How do NSAIDS work

A

Inhibition of prostaglandin and thromboxane synthesis
Lipid mediators derived from arachidonic acid
Cyclo-oxygenase enzymes
Widely distributed
Not stored pre-formed
Receptor-mediated

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2
Q

Describe the arachidonic acid pathway

A
  1. Membrane phospholipid converted to arachidonic acid via phospholipase A2
  2. Conversion to prostaglandin H2 or leukotrienes (bronchoconstrictor)
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3
Q

What enzyme is used to convert arachidonic acid to prostaglandin H2 and what can be produced from this

A

COX 1 and 2

PGE2, PGI2 (prostacyclin), Thromboxane A2
PGF2A, PGD2

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4
Q

What enzyme is used to convert arachidonic acid to leukrotrienes

A

Lipooxygenase

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5
Q

What are the unwanted actions of PGE2

A
Lowers the pain threshold 
Increases body temperature (fever)
Causes inflammation
Activates T-helper cells involved in certain hypersensitive conditions
Tumorigenesis
Inhibition of apoptosis
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6
Q

What receptors can PGE2 activate and what is the order of affinity for them

A

EP1-4
EP1 has the greatest affinity and EP4 has the least affinity
cAMP-depednent and independent downstream mechanisms

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7
Q

How does PGE2 cause fever and inflammation

A

PGE2 stimulates the neurones in the hypothalamus involved in temperature control leading to an increase in temperature (fever!)
PGE2 leads to mast cell degranulation leading to inflammation

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8
Q

How does PGE2 lower pain threshold

A

Increases pain sensation by sensitising the nociceptors

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9
Q

What are the desirable effects of PGE2

A

Is cytoprotective in the stomach
Causes bronchodilation a long with other prostaglandins
Increases GFR -> renal salt and water homeostasis
Vasoregulation (dilation and constriction depending on receptor activated)

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10
Q

Explain how PGE2 is gastroprotective

A

stimulates bicarbonate and mucous secretion in the stomach

Downregulates HCl secretion

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11
Q

Explain how PGE2 causes an increased GFR

A

Increases renal blood flow by acting as a vasodilator on the afferent arteriole to the glomerulus

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12
Q

Why may NSAIDS cause renal toxicity

A

Constriction of afferent renal arteriole
Reduction in renal artery flow
Reduced glomerular filtration rate

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13
Q

Why may NSAIDS cause worsening symptoms in asthmatics

A

Cyclooxygenase inhibition favours production of leukotrienes, which are bronchoconstrictors

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14
Q

What are the unwanted effects of NSAIDS

A
Vasoconstriction
Salt and water retention 
Reduced effect of antihypertensives 
Hypertension 
Myocardial infarction 
Stroke
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15
Q

Compare COX-1 and COX-2 and their inhibitors

A

Different (but overlapping) cellular distributions
Most NSAIDs reversibly inhibit both isoforms (example: ibuprofen)
Coxib family: selectively reversibly inhibit COX-2 (example: celecoxib)

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16
Q

What class of drug is ibuprofen

A

Non-selective reversible COX inhibitor

17
Q

Describe the pharmacodynamics of ibuprofen

A

Inhibits COX, which stops PGE2 production leading to analgesia, reduced inflammation and reduced fever

18
Q

What are the side effects of ibuprofen

A

Gastric irritation and ulceration
Bronchospasm
Prolonged bleeding
Nephrotoxicity

19
Q

What is the advantage of COX-1 specific inhibitors over COX-2 specific inhibitors

A

COX-2 inhibitors increase the risk of CVD compared to COX-1 specific inhibitors
May be due to imbalance between anti-thrombolytic prostacyclin and pro-thrombotic thromboxane A2

20
Q

Compare the roles of COX-1 with COX-2

A

COX-1 - more involved in gastric cytoprotection and platelet haemostasis

COX-2 - Expressed in inflammatory cells, involved in pain and inflammation

21
Q

What is the advantage of COX-2 specific inhibitors over COX-1 specific inhibitors

A

Cause fewer GI effects because there is a smaller decrease in PGE2 in the stomach.

22
Q

What class of drug is Celecoxib

A

Selective reversible COX2 inhibitor

23
Q

Describe the pharmacodynamics of celecoxib

A

Has similar effects to ibuprofen but you get more PGE2 formed in the stomach (because PGE2 is formed from COX1 in the stomach) so there is less risk of ulceration

24
Q

What are the side effects of celecoxib

A

Less severe GI and nephrotic side effects compared to aspirin and ibuprofen
Greater risk of CVD

25
Q

Describe paracetamol metabolism and why it is important in overdose

A

Produces a toxic metabolite that is usually inactivated by glutathione.
If this metabolite is produced in excess (e.g. in paracetamol overdose), then the metabolite starts binding to hepatic enzymes with –SH groups on them.
This leads to liver failure

26
Q

What drug is used for a paracetamol overdose and why

A

Acetylcysteine

Contains an –SH group, and so mops up the toxic metabolite during paracetamol overdose

27
Q

Why is aspirin the only NSAID used to manage thrombotic disease

A

Aspirin irreversibly binds to COX1
Platelets lack a nucleus and so cannot resynthesise COX1
Irreversibly inhibiting COX1 will permanently prevent TXA2 production from the targeted platelets, but endothelial cells will be able to replenish their COX1 and continue to produce prostacyclin, which is anti-thrombitic