Drugs in palliative care Flashcards

1
Q

What causes nausea and vomiting in palliative care

A
Chemo
Constipation
Hypercalcaemia
Oral candidiasis
GI obstruction
Drugs
Severe pain 
Infection 
Renal failure
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2
Q

How should anti-emetics be chosen?

A

Based on the likely mechanism of nausea

Consider the site of action especially when using combination of drugs

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3
Q

Describe how Cyclizine works and when it is good for nausea?

A

Antihistamine and anticholinergic, central action

Good for intracranial disorders

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4
Q

Describe how metoclopramide works and when it is good for nausea

A

Blocks central chemoreceptor trigger zone, peripheral prokinetic effects so good in gastroparesis, monitor for extrapyramidal side effects

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5
Q

Describe how domperidone works

A

Peripheral antidopaminergic so no dystonic effects

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6
Q

Describe how haloperidol works and when it is good for nausea

A

Dopamine antagonist, effective in drug or metabolically induced nausea, use lower doses IV/SC as twice as potent

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7
Q

Describe how ondansetron works and when it is good for nausea

A

Serotonin antagonist

Good for chemo/radiotherapy related nausea, may cause constipation

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8
Q

Describe how levomepromazine works and when it is good for nausea

A

Broad spectrum

Can sedate and be very effective if fear/anxiety are contributing to symptoms

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9
Q

List the 5 principles by which pain is managed

A
By the mouth 
By the clock 
By the ladder
For the individual 
Attention to detail
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10
Q

Describe the WHO pain ladder

A

Step 1 - non opioid eg. paracetamol
Step 2 - opioid for mild to moderate pain eg. codeine
Step 3 - opioid for moderate to severe pain eg morphine, diamorphine, oxycodone

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11
Q

What other drugs must be prescribed with opioids

A

Laxative and antiemetic

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12
Q

Describe how you prescribe opioids

A

Start low and go slow - 5mg oral morphine every 4hrs plus PRN 5mg morphine

Convert to modified release - calculate dose every 12hrs by calculating 24hr oral dose and divide by 2

Use a PRN dose for breakthrough pain - 1/6th total daily dose as an immediate release preparation (oramorph or sevredol)

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13
Q

List the side effects of opioids

A

Drowsiness
Nausea and vomiting
Constipation
Dry mouth

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14
Q

Describe the signs of opioid toxicity

A
Sedation 
Respiratory depression
Visual hallucination 
Myoclonic jerks 
Delirium
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15
Q

When should naloxone be used?

A

Life threatening respiratory depression

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16
Q

What happens if naloxone is given when it is not a life threatening situation

A

Pain crisis and potentially fatal acute withdrawal

17
Q

Describe opioid use in those with renal failure

A

At risk of toxicity due to accumulation of renally excreted opioids and metabolites

Fentanyl, alfentanil and buprenorphine have predominately hepatic metabolism so may be used in renal failure

18
Q

What drug can be used for rapid analgesia for pain during mobilising to toilet or being changed etc

A

Buccal fentanyl

19
Q

What causes constipation

A
Opioids 
Hypercalcaemia
Dehydration 
Drugs
Intra-abdominal disease
20
Q

How is constipation treated

A

Treat reversible causes
Good fluid intake
Ensure privacy and access to toilet
Medication options include:
- Stimulant (senna or bisacodyl) and softener (sodium docusate)
- Osmotic laxative (macrogol)
- Rectal treatments (Bisacodyl/glycerol suppositories)

21
Q

What causes breathlessness in palliative care

A

Infection, effusion, anaemia, arrhythmia, the disease, thromboembolism. superior vena cava syndrome

22
Q

How is breathlessness treated in palliative care?

A

Low dose/ breakthrough dose opioid

Benzodiazepine if associated anxiety (eg. lorazepam/midazolam)

23
Q

List some causes of oral problems in palliative care

A

Poor oral hygiene
Radiation
Drugs - anticholinergics, chemotherapy and diuretics
Infection - candidiasis and anticholinergics

24
Q

How is oral candidiasis treated?

A

Topical miconazole or oral fluconazole (check interactions with warfarin)
Oral nystatin may not work and may increase nausea

25
Q

How is herpes simplex treated?

A

Oral gan/aciclovir

26
Q

List the end of life anticipatory medications

A
Morphine for pain 
Haloperidol for agitation and N&V
Midazolam for anxiety and agitation
Levomepromazine for N&V
Glycopyrronium for troublesome resp secretions
27
Q

What must be done in terms of prescribing when someone is end of life/final days of life

A

Remove any unnecessary medications
Prescribe anticipatory medications
Start syringe driver if needed - remember to include regular doses when calculating requirements

28
Q

What are syringe drivers

A

Allow a continuous SC infusion of drugs, avoid repeated cannulation and injection when the oral route is not feasible