Autonomic Parasymathetic Drugs: Muscarinic Antagonists Flashcards

1
Q

muscarinic antagonists reversibly block

A

muscarinic receptors

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2
Q

antimuscarinics block the muscarinic effects of

A

antimuscarinics block the muscarinic effects of diarrhea, urination, miosis, bronchospasm, bradycardia, lacrimation, salivation

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3
Q

antimuscarinics block the action of

A

antimuscarinics block the action of acetylcholine at M receptors

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4
Q

Atropine is an

A

antimuscarinic

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5
Q

Atropine and related antimuscarinic alkaloids are found in

A
  1. the flower Atropa belladonna (‘Deadly Nightshade’)

2. the plant Datura stramonium (‘Jimsonweed’)

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6
Q

antimuscarinics cause

A

pupillary dilation (mydriasis) and cycloplegia (inability to accommodate the lens for near vision)

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7
Q

Antimuscarinics include

A
  1. scopolamine

2. atropine

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8
Q

scopolamine is used to treat

A

motion sickness (vestibular nausea)

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9
Q

scopolamine transdermal patch is used to treat

A

motion sickness

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10
Q

antimuscarinics (e.g. scopolamine) cross

A

antimuscarinics (e.g. scopolamine) cross the blood-brain barrier and inhibits central M1 receptors

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11
Q

antimuscarinics block parasympathetic activation of M2

A

antimuscarinics block parasympathetic activation of M2 receptors on the SA and AV nodes (increased heart rate, increased AV conduction)

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12
Q

antimuscarinics block parasympathetic activation of __________ receptors on the SA and AV nodes (increased heart rate, increased AV conduction)

A

M2

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13
Q

antimuscarinics (e.g. atropine) increase

A
  1. heart rate

2. AV conduction

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14
Q

antimuscarinics are used to treat

A
  1. Bradycardia

2. Heart Block

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15
Q

ipratropium and tiotropium are useful in the management of

A

COPD (antagonize M3 receptors → bronchodilation, decreased secretions)

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16
Q

ipratropium and tiotropium are ________ antimuscarinic bronchodilators

A

inhaled antimuscarinic bronchodilators

17
Q

_______ dissociates more slowly from the M3 receptor (longer bronchodilator action)

A

tiotropium

18
Q

M3 muscarinic antagonist

A
  1. oxybutynin
  2. ipratropium
  3. tiotropium
  4. Tolterodine
19
Q

oxybutynin and tolterodine treat

A

oxybutynin and tolterodine treat incontinence (antagonize M3 receptors → relax smooth muscle in ureters and bladder wall)

20
Q

M1 muscarinic receptors are found in the

A

CNS

21
Q

M1 receptor antagonists can reduce

A

M1 receptor antagonists can reduce tremors and rigidity in Parkinson’s disease

22
Q

centrally acting M1 muscarinic antagonist

A
  1. benztropine

2. trihexyphenidyl

23
Q

centrally acting antimuscarinics (e.g. benztropine, trihexyphenidyl) treat

A

centrally acting antimuscarinics (e.g. benztropine, trihexyphenidyl) treat tremor and rigidity in Parkinson’s (block excess cholinergic activity)

24
Q

excessive M1 activation is associated with

A

cogwheel rigidity in Parkinson’s disease

25
Q

antimuscarinics treat

A

extrapyramidal side effects caused by antipsychotics: e.g. dystonia, akathisia, parkinsonism (re-establish dopaminergic- cholinergic balance)

26
Q

antimuscarinics inhibit M3 receptors on

A

antimuscarinics inhibit M3 receptors on sweat glands → decreased sweating → hyperthermia

27
Q

antimuscarinics decrease

A

antimuscarinics decrease salivation and lacrimation → dry mouth and eyes

28
Q

antimuscarinics cause

A

antimuscarinics cause mydriasis and cycloplegia → blurred vision

29
Q

antimuscarinics cause mydriasis

A

antimuscarinics cause mydriasis → decreased outflow of aqueous humor → acute angle closure glaucoma

30
Q

antimuscarinics cross

A

antimuscarinics cross the BBB and antagonize central M1 receptors → sedation, agitation, hallucination, coma (especially in elderly patients)