Leg cramps Flashcards

1
Q

Quinine

Common indications

A
  1. Quinine is commonly used for the treatment and prevention of night-time leg cramps but should really be resevered for cases when cramps regularly disrupt sleep and when non-pharmacological methods, such as stretching have failured
  2. Quinine is a first-line treatment option for plasmodium falciparum malaria
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2
Q

Quinine

MOA

A
  • Leg cramps are cuased by painful involuntary contraction of skeletal muscle.
  • It is thought to act by reducing excitability of motor end plate in response to ACh stimulation
  • This reduces the frequency of muscle contraction
  • In malaria- the MOA is not well understood but overall it leads to rapid killing of P.falciparum parasites in the schiznot stage in the blood
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3
Q

Quinine

Adverse effects

A
  • Although quinine is usually safe at recommended doses, it is potentially very toxic and can be fatal in overdose
  • It causes: tinnitus, deafness and blindness (which may be permanent), GI upset and hypersentivity reactions
  • Qunine prolongs the QT interval and may therefore pre-dispose to arrhythmias
  • Hypoglycaemia can occur and can be particularly problematic in patients with malaria, which also predisposes to hypoglycaemia
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4
Q

Qunine

Warnings

A
  • Quinine should be prescribed with caution in people with existing hearing or visual loss
  • It is teratogenic, so should not be prescribed in the first tri-mester of pregnancy, although in the case of malaria it’s benefits outweigh the risk
  • Qunine should be avoided in people wiht G6PD deficieny as it can precipitate haemolysis
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5
Q

Qunine

Interactions

A
  • Qunine should be prescribed with caution in patients taking other drugs that prolong QT interval or cause arrhythmias such as amiodarone, anti-psychotics, quinolones, macrolide and SSRIs
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6
Q

Qunine

Communication

A
  • For nocturnal leg cramps, explain that you are recommending a 4 week trial of quinine in the hope of reducing the frequency of cramps
  • If there is no improvement after 4 weeks they are unlikely to experience any benefit and should stop taking it
  • Ask your patients to report any adverse effects- such as loss of hearing, visual disturbances and palpitations immediately
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7
Q

Qunine

Monitoring

A
  • Review your patients symptoms after 4 weeks and advise them to stop taking quinine if there has not been a significant improvement
  • review again at 3 months and consider discontinuation
  • Aim to avoid long-term use due to potentially serious side effects
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8
Q

Baclofen

Indications

A
  • Pain of muscle spasm in paliative care
  • Hiccup due to gastric distension in palliative care
  • Chronic severe spasticity resulting from disorders such as multiple sclerosis
    *
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9
Q

Baclofen

MOA

A
  • Baclofen is an antispastic agent acting at the spinal level
  • GABA derivative
  • Acts as a GABAb agonist. This stimulation, in turn, inhibits the release of excitatory amino acids glutamate and aspartate.
  • Neuromuscular transmission is unaffected by baclofen
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10
Q

Baclofen

Warnings

A
  • Containdicated in active peptic ulceration
  • Cautioned in
    • Psychiatric disorders- Psychosis, schizophrenia, depression or PD may be exacerbated by baclofen, close monitoring required
    • Epilepsy- Baclofen may also exacerbate epileptic manifestations
    • Cerebrovascular accidents
    • Elderly
    • Urinary disorders- acute retention of urine may occur
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11
Q

Baclofen

Adverse effects

A
  • CNS- Sedation, confusion, resp depression, hallucination, euphoria
  • Visual impairment
  • Hypotension
  • Pollakiuria, enuresis, dysuria
  • Seizures
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12
Q

Baclofen

Interactions

A
  • Antidepressants- TCAs= increased risk of hypotension, sedation and antimuscarinic effects
  • Levodopa- Increased risk of confusion, hallucinations, nausea and agitation. Worsening of PD has also occurred
  • Antihypertensives- concurrent use is likely to cause a rapid drop in BP
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