SM_180a: Pulmonary Pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the layout of the COPD GOLD guidelines diagram in terms of symptoms and exacerbations

A
  • Right is more symptomatic while left is less symptomatic
  • Upper is greater exacerbations while lower is less exacerbations

Group D has high symptom burden and many exacerbations

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2
Q

Describe the GINA asthma guidelines diagram

A
  • Step 1 to 5 (from better to worse controlled)
  • Each step has a preferred controller choice and a reliever
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3
Q

What are the short-acting beta-2 agonists?

A
  • Albuterol
  • Levalbuterol
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4
Q

What are the long-acting beta-2 agonists?

A
  • Oladaterol
  • Formoterol
  • Salmeterol
  • Others
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5
Q

Beta-2 agonists act at ______ and ______, causing ______, ______, and ______

A

Beta-2 agonists act at skeletal and smooth muscle, causing vasodilation, bronchodilation, and liver glycogenolysis

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6
Q

Beta-2 agonists act by _____ to _____ cAMP

A

Beta-2 agonists act on GPCRs to activate adenylate cyclase to increase cAMP

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7
Q

Short-acting beta-2 agonists are used as _____ medication because they start working in 5-10 minutes

A

Short-acting beta-2 agonists are used as rescue medication for COPD and asthma because they start working in 5-10 minutes

(last for 4-6 hours)

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8
Q

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are used as ______ medications because they act for 24 hours

A

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are used as controller medications because they act for 24 hours

(used everyday regardless of presence/absence of symptoms)

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9
Q

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are ____ line ____ therapy for COPD

A

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are first line controller therapy for COPD

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10
Q

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are only used in asthma when ______

A

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are only used in asthma when inhaled corticosteroids do not work

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11
Q

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are not used without inhaled corticosteroids in treatment of asthma because of _____

A

Long-acting beta-2 agonists are not used without inhaled corticosteroids in treatment of asthma because of risk of asthma exacerbations

(particularly in African Americans)

(ICS + LABA associated with better asthma control)

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12
Q

Long-acting beta-2 agonists _____ beta blockade

A

Long-acting beta-2 agonists do not cause beta blockade

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13
Q

What are the short-acting muscarinic receptor antagonists?

A
  • Ipratropium
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14
Q

What are the long-acting muscarinic receptor antagonists?

A
  • Tiotropium
  • Aclidinium
  • Umeclidinium
  • Glycopyrrolate
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15
Q

Muscarinic receptor antagonists reversibly inhibit the effects of acetylcholine on the ______, preventing ______ and thereby leading to ______

A

Muscarinic receptor antagonists reversibly inhibit the effects of acetylcholine on the M3 muscarinic receptor, preventing release of calcium and thereby leading to vasodilation

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16
Q

Long-acting muscarinic antagonists are used as ____ line _____ therapy for COPD

A

Long-acting muscarinic antagonists are used as first line controller therapy for COPD

(can then add on LABA)

17
Q

Long-acting muscarinic antagonists are used only for _____ in asthma

A

Long-acting muscarinic antagonists are used only for persistent symptoms after using LABA and ICS in asthma

(limited role)

18
Q

A common side effect of muscarinic receptor antagonists is _______

A

A common side effect of muscarinic receptor antagonists is inhaled muscarnic antagonist-induced anisocoria (dilation of pleural)

(part of anticholinergic toxidrome)

19
Q

If a Group B COPD patient has persistent symptoms after using a long-bronchodilator (LABA or LAMA), treat them with _____

A

If a Group B COPD patient has persistent symptoms after using a long-bronchodilator (LABA or LAMA), treat them with LAMA + LABA

(less exacerbations, longer time to first exacerbation, and less pneumonia_

20
Q

What are the inhaled corticosteroids?

A
  • Budesonide
  • Mometasone
  • Fluticasone
  • Beclamethasone
  • Others
21
Q

Inhaled corticosteroids act by binding to the _______ receptor, limiting _______, _______, and _______

A

Inhaled corticosteroids act by binding to the glucocorticoid receptor, limiting inflammation in airway, mucus production, and airway edema

22
Q

Inhaled corticosterois are used in treatment of COPD when ______

A

Inhaled corticosterois are used in treatment of COPD when patient has ongoing symptoms despite LABA / LAMA

23
Q

Inhaled corticosteroids are _____ therapy for asthma

A

Inhaled corticosteroids are frontline therapy for asthma

(if symptoms continue, increase ICS dose or add LABA)

24
Q

Adverse effects of inhaled corticosteroids include ______ and ______

A

Adverse effects of inhaled corticosteroids include oral candidiasis and pneumonia

25
Q

What are the leukotriene antagonists?

A
  • Montelukast
  • Zafirlukast
  • Pranlukast
  • Zileuton
26
Q

Montelukast/zafirlukast/pranlukast limit activation of the _____ receptor

A

Montelukast/zafirlukast/pranlukast limit activation of the CysLT1 receptor

27
Q

Zileuton works by ______

A

Zileuton works by inhibiting breakdown of arachidonic acid into leukotriene A4

28
Q

_______ is the most commonly used leukotriene antagonist because of _____ and _____

A

Montelukast is the most commonly used leukotriene antagonist because of its minimal drug-drug interactions and favorable side-effect profile

(zafirlukast and zileuton have been associated with hepatic dysfunction)

29
Q

Leukotriene antagonists can be used as a ______ option in asthma

A

Leukotriene antagonists can be used as controller option in asthma

30
Q

Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors (Roflumilast) act by blocking ______ to ______

A

Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors (Roflumilast) act by blocking phosphodiesterase-4 to prevent breakdown of cAMP

31
Q

Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors (Roflumilast) are used in treatment of COPD when ______, ______, or ______

A

Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors (Roflumilast) are used in treatment of COPD when FEV1 < 50%, chronic bronchitis, or Group D with frequent exacerbations

(reduce exacerbations in patients with GOLD D COPD)

32
Q

Main side effect of phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors (Roflumilast) is _______

A

Main side effect of phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors (Roflumilast) is GI side effects

33
Q

Theophylline is a _______

A

Theophylline is a methylxanthine (non-selective PDE inhibitor)

34
Q

Use of theophyilline is limited due to its _____ therapeutic window and ability to cause _____ and _____ at toxic levels

A

Use of theophyilline is limited due to its narrow therapeutic window and ability to cause fatal arrhythmias and seizures at toxic levels

35
Q

Theophylline is an additional treatment option for asthma when ______

A

Theophylline is an additional treatment option for asthma when patient is in Step 3-5 and ICS and LABA have not worked

36
Q

Leukotriene antagonists act on the ______ pathway to limit ______, ______, and ______

A

Leukotriene antagonists act on the arachidonic acid metabolism pathway to limit airway smooth muscle contraction, inflammation, and edema