Chapter 3 Pharm
Angie Rhinehart
Created on September 5, 2023
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Transcript
Chapter 3
Principles of Pharmacology
Overview
Pharmacokinetics
Understanding the use of drugs in the treatment of disease
What the drug does to the body
What the body does to the drug
Pharmacotherapeutics
Pharmacodynamics
- Generic name-Most common name
- Trade name; brand name (followed by a ® symbol)-Usually easier to pronounce
- Chemical name-harder to remember, longer names
It is crucial to know the different names of a drug
Drug Names
Antagonist: Drug attaches at drug receptor site, but no chemical drug response is produced and the drug prevents activation of the receptor.
Agonist: Drug attaches at receptor site and activates the receptor; the drug has an action similar to the body's own chemicals. Partial Agonist: Drug attaches at drug receptor site, but only a slight chemical action is produced.
Drug attachment & REceptor sites
Types of Drug Actions
GI tract—passes the fibrous/insoluble waste Kidneys—filters & excretes chemicals that may be made water-soluble Lungs—chemicals may be exhaled Skin—chemicals may be lost through evaporation during sweating
Inactive chemicals, by-products, and waste removal
Excretion
04
Biotransformation-Usually occurs in the liver; enzymes break down the chemicals into useful partsFirst-pass effect-Much of the drug is inactivated on it's first pass through the liver before being distributed to the bodyAffected by genetic and developmental factors
Blood system Lymph system Barriers: Blood–brain Placental
03
Once the drug is absorbed & distributed in the body, it is transformed or altered into active/inactive chemicals
Metabolism
02
The ways a drug moves by means of circulating body fluids to their sites of action in the body
Distribution
01
Absorption processes: Solubility—ability of a drug to dissolve Diffusion—high to lower concentration Filtration—a filter prevents passage of certain molecules Osmosis—diffusion through a semipermeable membrane from a less dense solution to a more dense solution The route of administration influences absorption. EnteralParenteralPercutaneousIntramuscular Percutaneous Sublingual Buccal
How a drug enters the body and passes into the circulation
Absorption
Basic Drug Processes
Helps explain the dose, frequency, and duration for different drugs.
The amount of time it takes the body to remove 50% of a drug from the body.
Half-Life
Basics of Drug Action
Some common allergies, may be life-threatening; Sulfa, aspirin, penicillin
Anaphylactic reaction
Strange, peculiar, or unpredicted responses;from missing/defective metabolic enzymes, caused by genetic/hormonal
Surprise!
May require hospitalization or be life-threatening
More severe symptoms or problems
These are expected effects; usually GI related
Usually mild, but annoying responses to the drug
When the drug does what is desired & the Therapeutic goal is reached
Expected response of the drug
05
04
Hypersensitivity or allergy
Idiosyncratic reactions
03
Adverse reactions
02
Side effects
01
Desired action
- Brand name versus generic-Patent for 17 years; brand usually more expensive
- Generic equivalent-Identical with respect to active ingredients
- Bioequivalent-Chemically the same as the brand name product
Bioequivalence
One drug making another less effective. Many antibiotics make birth control less effective
Adverse effect
Effects of two drugs taken together where the sum is greater than when taken alone
Synergistic effect
One drug interfering with the action of another. Flumazenil displaces sedative effects of diazepam.
Antagonistic effect
Drugs given together because they have an additive effect and work as a team
Additive effect
When one drug changes the action of another drug. Usually takes place during metabolism.
LOREM IPSUM DOLOR SIT
Drug Interactions
- Hydration problems
- Low blood pressure
- Shock
- Heart failure
- Reduced blood flow
- Ethnicity/Race
- Body size and lean-to-fat ratio
- Liver problems
Many drugs can cause interactions with other drugs, so it is vital for nurses to understand possible interactions.
Because both drugs and alochol are processed in the liver, it can cause potential interactions. Alcohol can affect the availability of the drug.
Caffeine can affect the action of some drugs. Some may increase effects of anticlotting drugs. Some can't be taken with aged cheese, red wine, or many processed foods. Certain juices can affect absorption.
Personal Factors
Drugs and laboratory tests
Alcohol interactions
Food interactions
Food, Alcohol, and Drug Interactions
- trade and generic name of the drug
- the dosage range
- the desired action
- expected side effects
- adverse effects
- how to give the drug
- important information that you will need to know before to giving the drug
Drug cards should include the following info:
Drug Cards