Pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

Side effect of thiazides

A

Altered lipid concentration, high Uris acid, glucose, calcium
Hypokalaemia, hyponatraemia, gout

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2
Q

Warfarin interactions

A

Metabolised by the Cytochrome P450 system in liver.

Inhibitors (decrease the effect): NSAIDs, abx (erythromycin and ciprofloxacin), amiodarone, SSRIs.

Enhancers (increase effect): phenytoin, carbamazepine, rifampicin

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3
Q

Clotting factors affected by warfarin

A

2, 7, 9, 10. (1972)

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4
Q

Calcium antagonist 2 types and use

A

Dihydropyridines (nifedipine, amlodipine, ramipril) are mainly peripheral vasodilator and are used in conjunction with b blockers to prevent reflex tachycardia. Hypertension and angina

Non-dihydropyridines (verapamil, diltiazem). Also slows conduction at AV/SA node so DONT give with BBlocker

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5
Q

ACE inhibitors action

A

Dilation of efferent and afferent arteriole reducing renal filtration fraction.

Side effects include renal failure, first use hypotension, cough, angioedema

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6
Q

Action of digoxin

A

Control heart rate and contractililty in HF and AF. Blocks Na/K+ pump.

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7
Q

Actions to take if TG>20 mmol/L

A

Refer to lipid clinic if not alcoholic nor DM

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8
Q

Action of penicillins

A

inhibit cell wall formation through binding of beta lactam ring to cell membrane.

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9
Q

Benefits of cephalosporins and action

A

work similarly to penicillins by binding penicillin-binding protein and inhibiting its action. They do not get inactivated by staphylococcal penicillinases. Works well in gram + and gram - organisms, except for enterococci and gram - anaerobic bacteria.

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10
Q

Monobactam abx what bacteria use

A

aerobic gram - bacilli

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11
Q

Carbapenems what type of bacteria they cover

A

Broadest spectrum - covers gram +, gram - and anaerobic (not MRSA).

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12
Q

Macrolide side effect and drug interactions.

A

QT prolongation potentially leading to torsade de pointe. Interactions with carbamazepine, digoxin, theophyllines

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13
Q

Examples of macrolide and common uses and MOA

A

Erythromycin, clarithromycin… Usually used for gram - ad atypical bacteria (mycoplasma, legionella, chlamydia) upper resp tract infection. Also good for penicillin replacement in allergy. interfers with 50s ribosome binding.

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14
Q

Tetracycline abx MOA and common uses.

A

Bacteriostatic and inhibition of tRNA. Used for gram + and - bacteria, especially complicated skin and soft tissue infections and intra-abdo sepsis.

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15
Q

Common side effect of tetracyclines

A

brown discolouration of teeth, N&V.

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16
Q

Common use of trimethoprim and co-trimoxazole

A

Trimethoprim: frequently used in UTI. Co-trimoxazole (sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim) is used mainly in pneumocystis jirovecci.

17
Q

MOA and side effects of co-trimoxazole

A

MOA: inhibit folic acid synthesis. Side effects include skin eruptions, Steven-johnson’s syndrome and thrombocytopenia. TERATOGENIC

18
Q

Steven-johnson’s syndrome what it is and 4 drug causes

A

Severe skin reaction. Caused by co-trimoxazole, lamotrigine, carbamazepine, allopurinol. amongst others

19
Q

ciprofloxacin class and uses

A

quinolones. Ciprofloxacin is used against gram - bacteria in most areas of body.

20
Q

Quinolones MOA. issue with them

A

inhibits DNA gyrase, so unwounds DNA. Can cause higher rates of MRSA and c.dif

21
Q

Gentamicin drug class and common use

A

Aminoglycoside abx (30s ribosome inhibition). Used for gram - bacteria, esp in staph aureus in synergy with penicillins.

22
Q

Glycopeptide common use and side effect

A

Includes vancomycin and teicoplanin. can cause ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity. Used mainly for gram + bacteria, especially MRSA.

23
Q

Examples of cephalosporins

A

cefazolin, cefalexin, cefuroxime.

24
Q

Abx treatment for MRSA

A

Linezolid, vancomycin, co-trimoxazole.

25
Q

Methotrexate side effects

A

Agranulocytosis/ pancytopenia (if more than granulocytes - neutrophils, eosinophils and basophils also present)

26
Q

Spironolactone MOA

A

Inhibits mineralocorticoid receptors in cortical collecting ducts. Aldosterone antagonist

27
Q

Ibesartan

A

Angiotensin II antagonist. Usually used in patients who can’t tolerate ACE. Can cause hypotension and hyperkalaemia

28
Q

Effect of prostaglandin on glaucoma

A

Turn iris brown, increase uveoscleral outflow

29
Q

Effect of b blockers on glaucoma

A

Decreases aqueous humour production

30
Q

Médications to avoid in constipation

A

Calcium channel blockers, opioids, TCA, antimuscarinics

31
Q

SSRIs avoid if

A

Hyponatraemia

32
Q

Drugs to avoid in parkinsonsim

A

Antipsychotics, metoclopramide, prochlorperazine

33
Q

Drugs to avoid in falls

A

Benzodiazepines, antipsychotics, first gen antihistamines, b blockers or vasodilatory drugs, long term opiates, antimuscarinics (dizziness and impaired balance)

34
Q

First mine management of osteoporosis with DXA >2.5 or fragility fracture

A

Alendronic acid