U5 Oxygenation Drugs PDF - NCM106 Pharmacology Lecture
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Summary
These lecture notes cover U5 Oxygenation Drugs, part of NCM106 Pharmacology. The document details drugs used in managing oxygenation problems, including classification, mechanisms of action, indications, contraindications, side effects, and evaluation criteria. It also touches on nursing responsibilities and health education.
Full Transcript
13/10/2024 U5 Oxygenation Drugs NCM106 Pharmacology Lecture 1 Contents of this cluster Drugs in Managing Oxygenation Problems will cover: Classify prototype respiratory, cardiovascular & CNS drugs according to their pharma...
13/10/2024 U5 Oxygenation Drugs NCM106 Pharmacology Lecture 1 Contents of this cluster Drugs in Managing Oxygenation Problems will cover: Classify prototype respiratory, cardiovascular & CNS drugs according to their pharmacologic & therapeutic effects. Discuss specific mechanism of action. Identify appropriate indication, contraindication, side-effects, adverse effects, other effects. Identify nursing responsibilities. Identify appropriate health education. Identify appropriate evaluation criteria to assess client’s response. 2 1 13/10/2024 01 Drugs acting on Respiratory System 3 Drugs acting on Upper Respiratory Tract 4 2 13/10/2024 Antitussives o Suppress the cough reflex - Particular for uncomfortable, nonproductive cough o Act directly on the medullary cough center o Rapidly absorbed, metabolized in the liver, & excreted in the urine o Codeine & hydrocodone are narcotics o C/I: people who need cough to maintain airway, pregnancy & lactation o A/E: CNS adverse effects, including drowsiness & sedation o Drug interaction: MAO inhibitors → hypotension, fever, nausea 5 Decongestants o Decrease the overproduction of secretions by causing local vasoconstriction to the upper respiratory tract o Frequent or prolonged use ➔ rebound congestion (technically called Rhinitis medicamentosa) o Usually, adrenergics or sympathomimetics o Topical nasal decongestants are for nasal congestion - almost immediate onset with less systemic effects - A/E: local stinging, burning o Topical steroid decongestants are for allergic rhinitis o Oral decongestants shrink the nasal mucous membrane (stimulating the o 1receptors in the nasal mucous membranes) → airway alpha-adrenergic o Generally, well absorbed (20-45 minutes) - A/E: anxiety, tenseness, restlessness, tremors, hypertension, arrhythmias, sweating, & pallor 6 3 13/10/2024 Antihistamines o Block the release or action of histamine o inflammation secretions & narrows airways o With antipruritic effects o First-generation have greater anticholinergic effects (drowsiness) while second-generation is less-sedating (individual variances noted) o Well absorbed orally (1-3 hrs); generally metabolized in the liver, with excretion in the feces & urines o A/E: drying of the respiratory & GI mucous membranes, GI upset & nausea, arrhythmias, dysuria, urinary hesitancy, & skin eruption & itching associated with dryness 7 Expectorant o Increase productive cough ➔ clear the airways - liquefy lower respiratory tract secretions ➔ viscosity of secretions ➔ adhesiveness & surface tension ➔ easier to cough up coughing o Rapidly absorbed (30 minutes) o A/E: GI symptoms (e.g., nausea, vomiting, anorexia); headache, dizziness, or both; occasionally, a mild rash o Should not be taken more than a week 8 4 13/10/2024 Mucolytics o Increase or liquefy respiratory secretions to aid the clearing of the airways in high-risk respiratory patients o Acetylcysteine - splits disulfide bonds (responsible for holding the mucus material together) ➔ viscosity of secretions o Dornase Alfa - separate extracellular DNA from proteins ➔ selectively break down respiratory tract mucus A/E: GI upset, stomatitis, rhinorrhea, bronchospasm, & occasionally a rash 9 Drug action sites 10 5 13/10/2024 Drugs acting on Lower Respiratory Tract 11 Bronchodilators o Facilitate respiration by dilating the airways (Antiasthmatics) o For bronchial asthma or bronchospasm (COPD) o Xanthines ‘-phylline’ - Direct effect on the smooth muscles of the respiratory tract, both in the bronchi & in the blood vessels - Narrow margin of safety o Sympathomimetics - dilation of the bronchi with increased rate & depth of respiration - Epinephrine is the drug of choice (acute bronchospasm) o Anticholinergics ‘-ium’ - Block the action of neurotransmitter Ach at vagal-mediated receptor sites causing relaxed smooth muscles (COPD) o 12 6 13/10/2024 Antiinflammatory o Increase or liquefy respiratory secretions to aid the clearing of the airways in high-risk respiratory patients o Inhaled steroids - effective for bronchospasm - leads to swelling & promotion of beta-adrenergic activity - A/E: sore throat, hoarseness, coughing, dry mouth, pharyngeal & laryngeal fungal infections o Leukotriene receptor antagonists - selectively & competitively block (‘-kast’) or antagonize receptors for the production of leukotrienes ➔ block S/Sx of asthma - rapidly absorbed from the GIT - use cautiously in patients with hepatic or renal impairment 13 Immune modulators o Antibodies as add-on maintenance therapy for moderate- severe asthma o ‘-mab’ o Do not have immediate effects o Benralizumab - binds to interleukin-5 receptor expressed on eosinophils & basophils → apoptosis o Omalizumab - binds to IgE receptors on mast cells, basophils & dendritic cells → IgE-mediated inflammation. o Mepolizumab & reslizumab - bind to inhibit interleukin-5 (cytokine that facilitates growth & activation of the eosinophils) o Dupilumab - binds to cells that have a receptor shared by interleukin-4 & interleukin-13. 14 7 13/10/2024 P cromolyn Mast Cell Stabilizer o Prevents the release of inflammatory & bronchoconstricting substances (like histamine) when mast cells are stimulated to release these substances because of irritation or the presence of an antigen. o It is no longer part of the treatment standards because of the availability of more specific & safer drugs. o Used to treat the symptoms of mastocytosis. o Mastocytosis is a rare condition caused by too many mast cells in the body. o S/Sx: abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headache, flushing or itching of skin, or hives. 15 Lung Surfactants o Naturally occurring compounds or lipoproteins containing lipids & apoproteins that reduce the surface tension within the alveoli’ o ‘-tant’ o Replace surfactant in the lungs of neonates with Respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) o Instilled directly into the trachea & begin to act immediately on instillation o No contraindications 16 8 13/10/2024 Drug action sites 17 Resources Burchum, J.R., Rosethal, L.D. (2019). Lehne’s Pharmacology for nursing care 10th edition. Missouri, USA: Elsevier Inc. Johnson, Nachole. (2017). Pharmacology mnemonics for the family nurse practitioner. USA: Nachole Johnson & ReNursing Publishing Company. Karch, A.M. (2017). Focus on nursing pharmacology Seventh edition. Philadelphia, USA: Wolters Kluwer. Karch, A. M., Tucker, R. G. (2020). Focus on nursing pharmacology Eighth edition. Philadelphia, USA: Wolters Kluwer. McCuistion, L.E., Vuljoin-Dimaggio, K., Winton, M.B., Yeager, J.J. (2023). Pharmacology A patient-centered nursing process approach 11th edition. Missouri, USA: Elsevier. Tucker, Rebecca G. (2023). Karch’s Focus on nursing pharmacology Ninth edition. Philadelphia, USA: Wolters Kluwer. 18 9