Pharmacology Firecracker
Pharmacology Firecracker
Pharmacology Firecracker
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Agents
8 questions
0
less
Stimulates both muscarinic and nicotinic receptors
Quaternary ammonium compound positively charged and cannot cross the
blood brain barrier
Topical use for treatment of glaucoma, especially open-angle type
Used to relieve intraocular pressure
Used to constrict pupils (miosis) for cataract surgery
- Contraction of the ciliary muscle helps open the trabecular meshwork in the canal
less
barrier.
less
Pyridostigmine is similar in all ways to neostigmine, except its longer acting,
in other words it:
3) Edrophonium
less
Recall:
Symptoms of anticholinergic overdose (e.g., atropine overdose):
Bradycardia
Excitation (skeletal muscle, CNS)
Lacrimation
Sweating
Salivation
Since it crosses the BBB, it can produce CNS effects of cholinergic confusion
But can also treat CNS symptoms from anticholinergic drug overdose
5) Echothiophate
less
Sympathomimetics
next
11 questions
0
A) 8 Direct agents
1) Epinephrine: agonist to all receptors (1, 2, 2, mild 1)
less
Clinical applications: asthma, hypotension, cardiac resuscitation, anaphylaxis
2) Norepinephrine: agonist to 1, 2, and mild 1; no effect on 2
less
Clinical Applications: hypotension such as in sepsis, but can decrease renal
and mesenteric perfusion
Note: because NE has no effect on the 2 receptor and therefore cannot elicit the
bronchodilatory or vasodilatory effects of 2 receptors, NE cannot be substituted
Clinical applications: heart failure, hypotension. There is some support for less
dopamines role in preserving renal perfusion.
5) Dobutamine: 1 > 2
less
Is a mixed agent: weak, direct agonist of both alpha and beta receptors
Strong indirect effect of inducing presynaptic release of stored
catecholamines
less
less
less
less
Side effect: sedation, hypotension, dry mouth, can have withdrawal symptoms
less
1 question
0
There are 2 basic classes of NMJ blockers: nondepolarizing and depolarizing agents.
These represent the majority of NMJ blocking agents that are clinically used.
less
During later phase II, desensitizing agents are susceptible to reversal by ACh
esterase inhibitors.
Non-depolarizing agents are competitive antagonists of ACh at the nicotinic AChR
(most commonly those at the NMJ).
less
Uses: Because of long duration of action, useful for surgical paralysis. Use has been
supplanted by newer agents.
Adverse effects: Causes weak muscarinic ACh antagonism and histamine release.
Atracurium: Similar to tubocurarine in duration of activity but does not have
anticholinergic or histaminergic effects.
Blockers
next
1 question
0
carvedilol: / blocker
Selectivity:
Beta:
Timolol
Propranolol
Nadolol
PIndolol
Because these drugs can have sympathomimetic effects which can exacerbate
angina, they are contraindicated in patients with angina.
Blockers
next
5 questions
0
Glaucoma Treatment
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Agents
3 questions
0
Open angle glaucoma: normal ocular angle. Occurs due to acutely reduced or
obstructed outflow from the canal of Schlemm.
Closed angle glaucoma: generally from excessive pupillary dilation; posterior
chamber pressure pushes iris forward, closing the ocular angle prevents drainage
of aqueous humor. This is a medical emergency
Eye innervation:
M3 agonists can also open the trabecular meshwork outflow of aqueous humor.
Miotic agents (parasympathomimetics)
less
Examples: pilocarpine, carbachol, echothiophate, physostigmine
These agents contract the ciliary muscles and open the trabecular meshwork
increased outflow of aqueous humor with resultant decrease in IOP
less
less
Example: Lantanoprost
Prostaglandins are thought to IOP by outflow of aqueous humor.
4 questions
0
Atropine
less
These effects are due to the inhibition of parasympathetic tone on the heart
increase HR
Inhibits salivary/sweat/mucus gland airway secretions
Decreases stomach acid secretions
Decreases gut motility
Can be used to treat symptoms of organophosphate poisoning
Overdosage can produce an anticholinergic toxidrome (hot as a hare, blind
as a bat, dry as a bone, red as a beet, and mad as a hatter)
Crosses the blood brain barrier and can result in CNS manifestations of
anticholinergic toxidrome
Beware: can cause acute angle closure glaucoma or urinary retention in men
with prostatic hyperplasia
Benztropine
Centrally acting anticholinergic with antihistamine properties
less
Treatment for Parkinsons symptoms (decreases cholinergic stimulation)
less
less
Enzyme Kinetics
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Physiology
5 questions
0
less
Competitive inhibitors compete with substrate for the enzymes active site, less
therefore Km because it takes more substrate to reach 1/2 Vmax
Inhibition can be completely overcome by increasing substrate, therefore
Vmax is unchanged
For noncompetitive inhibitors:
Noncompetitive inhibitors bind outside the active site (and therefore do notless
compete with the substrate).
Drug Elimination
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Physiology
2 questions
0
Zero-order elimination
less
3 questions
0
The smooth endoplasmic reticulum of liver cells is the principal organelle of drug
metabolism
Phase I
less
Oxidation (cytochrome P450, monoamine oxidase, alcohol dehydrogenase)
Reduction (NADPH)
Hydrolysis
For drugs that are inactivated, if they are sufficiently polar they can be excreted
renally. Most will undergo subsequent Phase II metabolism.
Phase II
Those who are slow acetylators are at increased risk for druginduced SLE (Hydralazine > Procainamide > INH)
Glucuronidation (UDP-glucuronosyltransferase)
Sulfation (sulfotransferase)
less
Results in inactive metabolites that are very polar, and therefore readily
renally excreted
Pharmacodynamics
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Physiology
5 questions
0
less
less
less
Efficacy is decreased: Curve is shifted downward
Potency may or may not be affected by a noncompetitive antagonist.
A) If efficacy of endogenous agonist is low, low receptor density, and/or poor
coupling of receptors antagonist has no effect on potency: curve does not shift to
the right
11 questions
0
5 questions
0
less
The enzyme choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) catalyzes this step.
Newly formed ACh is then packaged into presynaptic vesicles via the ACh
transporter.
When the vesicle is released, ACh enters the synaptic cleft where it can bind
to the postsynaptic receptors.
AChE (ACh Esterase) is an enzyme that degrades ACh in the synapse choline +
acetic acid.
There are several drugs that can interfere with the ACh synthesis or degradation
pathway:
Hemicholinium = prevents intracellular influx of choline by reuptake
Vesamicol = prevents ACh from being packaged into intracellular vesicles
Botulinum = prevents presynaptic vesicle release of ACh by cleaving synaptobrevin
Black widow spider toxin = increases presynaptic vesicle release of ACh
Cholinesterase inhibitors = prevents the breakdown of ACh in the synaptic channel,
by inhibiting the enzyme acetylcholinesterase
3 questions
0
Spare receptor theory states that a maximal physiological effect of a drug is often
met when a proportion of the receptors remain unbound by the drug.
With ligand gated ion channels, this is the case. The percentage of channels
less
bound by the ligand is proportional to the ion flow and to the effect.
But with the case of G-protein coupled receptors and others that
use downstream effectors, the effect is often magnified.
So that means that drug X can bind to receptor A, trigger a cascade,
disassociate and then bind to receptor B, while receptor A is still activating its effect.
Thus all receptors neednt be temporally occupied to create a maximal downstream
effect.
Thus, it isnt a maximal binding of a drug to its receptor sites which causes a
max effect, but rather a downstream effector (like PKA) that becomes the limiting
reagent.
When graphically portrayed on a dose response curve, the effect of spare receptors
with the addition of a irreversible antagonist in the presence of an agonist would
show a direct translation to the right. In other words, the pharmacodynamics
would remain unchanged. The only change would be the EC50 (concentration of the
drug that produces 50% maximal response), would increase.
less
As you experimentally increase this antagonist concentration, the curve would
keep shifting right until too many receptors are occupied, at which point the curve will
behave like a irreversible agonist dose curve, with Emax decreasing.
Take home point: Since drug effect is a direct result from the activity of downstream
effectors (a cascade), a cell can increase its expression of surface receptors to
produce a more sensitive response. If you have many more receptors, then you
need less drug to bind the same amount of receptors and produce the same
downstream effect.
Pharmacokinetics
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Physiology
8 questions
0
Vd is not a "real" number, it just reflects how a drug will distribute throughout
less
the body based on solubility, charge, size, etc
Surface area and vascularity of affected area (more blood flow, more drug
delivery; more surface area, more drug entry into the circulation)
Drugs bound to plasma proteins (albumin) are not available for:
Further distribution into tissues
Active pharmacological action
Glomerular filtration
less
Metabolism
Low Vd (4-8L) pharmacokinetics
High plasma protein bound
less
Example: Warfarin
Medium Vd (8-60L) pharmacokinetics
Water soluble molecules
Distributes into extracellular fluid (10-20L) or total body water (30-45L)
less
Example: Ethanol
High Vd (Vd > 60L) pharmacokinetics
Example: Chloroquine
less
less
T1/2 = 0.7 Vd / CL
less
Steady state (Css) = equilibrium point where amount of drug administered exactly
replaces the amount of drug excreted. It takes about 4 x T1/2 to reach steady state.
CL clearance of drug
less
Therapeutic Index
next
4 questions
0
Every drug has a dose-response curve of effectiveness and a curve for toxicity. A
comparison of these two curves will give you the drugs therapeutic index.
Therapeutic index: (dose at which 50% of subjects develop a toxic effect) / (median
effective dose) = (TD50) / (ED50). Historically, the TI was defined using the lethal dose
(LD50) rather than the toxic dose (TD50).
In the image: Therapeutic index = 10/0.3 = 33
A higher therapeutic index value indicates a safer drug
6 questions
0
less
less
less
Cocaine also enhances transmission of other monoamines such as dopamine and 5HT by blocking presynaptic re-uptake. This mediates the effects of cocaine in the
mesolimbic reward center.
Amphetamine: increases presynaptic vesicle release of NE and, to a lesser extent,
acts as a reuptake inhibitor
3 questions
0
Ligand-gated ion channels: nicotinic cholinergic receptor, GABA, Glu, Asp & Gly
receptors
G-protein-coupled receptors: several classes, including those for most peptide
hormones, eicosanoids, and biogenic amines (example: catecholamines)
Signal transmission through transcription factors: receptors for lipophilic molecules
(example: steroid hormones, thyroid hormone, vitamin D, retinoids)
4 questions
0
DAG stays bound to cell membrane and, together with Ca2+ liberated from
the endoplasmic reticulum due to IP3, activates protein kinase C
The way to remember which receptor types use which G protein pathway is:
G(i) = 2, M2, D2 (just memorize that 2 is by inhibition, G(i); rarely will theyless
test M2 or D2)
G(s) = 1, 2, H2, V2, D1 (need to memorize, but if you memorize G(q), this will
be easy)
G(q) = 1, H1, V1, M1, M3 (all the 1s except 1 and D1. Remember this
phrase: Bob andDan are NOT Quiet Ones)
Alternatively, use the mnemonic: QISS and QIQ till youre SIQ of SQS
1 Q
2 I
1 S
2 S
M1 Q
M2 I
M3 Q
D1 S
D2 I
H1 Q
H2 S
V1 Q
V2 S
CYP450 Interactions
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Toxicology
3 questions
0
Note: The list of inducers and inhibitors here is not meant to be a list of all less
drugs that affect the P450 system, but a select few that are high yield for exam
purposes and for clinical settings.
Drugs that induce P450
less
Barbiturates are P450 inducers.
Nevirapine is a P450 inducer.
St. Johns wort is a P450 inducer.
Smoking (aromatic hydrocarbons) is a P450 inducer.
Phenytoin is a P450 inducer.
Rifampin is a P450 inducer.
Griseofulvin is a P450 inducer.
Carbamazepine is a P450 inducer.
Chronic ethanol use/abuse is a P450 inducer.
less
Alcohol Metabolism
next
4 questions
0
less
less
Formic acid is broken down into formate byproduct. This byproduct is toxic
because it inhibits mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase, can result in optic nerve
injury.
Treatment for methanol toxicity:
Correct acid/base status
Folic acid: cofactor in conversion of formic acid to CO2
Ethanol: to competitively inhibit methanol breakdown
Fomepizole: inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase
Toxicology
next
Basic Sciences Pharmacology Toxicology
15 questions
0
Acetaminophen
hepatic proteins and cause hepatic necrosis, which can potentially become lifethreatening.
High aspirin doses affect the medullary respiratory center, which leads to
hyperventilation and a respiratory alkalosis that can usually compensated by
excretion of H and NH4 as well as reabsorption of bicarbonate.
Note: toxic doses of aspirin can lead to respiratory paralysis, and respiratory acidosis
can then ensue instead due to decreased ventilation and increased CO 2 production
Chronic amphetamine usage can produce symptoms that appear similar to the
psychotic episodes associated with schizophrenia, which makes sense due to its
mechanism of action dopamine and NE release. Rather than try and memorize
the list of CNSeffects, if you recall its mechanism of action, a list of its side effects
should be easy to generate.
Cardiovascular symptoms: arrhythmias, hypertension, angina, palpitations,
headache, chills, hyperhidrosis
Antidotes: treat overdoses with chlorpromazine or haloperidol -blocking
properties which relieve both CNS and cardiovascular side effects.
less
Symptoms: DUMBBELSS:
less
diarrhea, urination, miosis, bronchospasm, bradycardia, excitation of skeletal muscle
andCNS, lacrimation, sweating, and salivation
Symptoms:
less
Benzodiazepines target the GABAA receptors and the frequency of their less
chloride channel opening, causing postsynaptic hyperpolarization and inhibiting
action potential generation.
Symptoms: apnea, drowsiness, excessive amounts can also cause cardiac
depression
less
Symptoms: Hypotension, bradycardia, hyperkalemia, hypoglycemia,
bronchiolar smooth muscle constriction (bronchoconstriction airway resistance,
especially in asthmatics)
Antidote: Glucagon
Carbon Monoxide
less
less
less
Antidote: Pyridoxine
less
Lead
less
less
- apnea
- miosis (except meperidine, an opioid which can cause mydriasis due to muscarinic
antagonism)
- sedation
- constipation
Antidote: Naloxone
Phenobarbital
Symptoms: sedation, hypotension, cardiac depression
less
Symptoms:
less
Note: the drugs that can precipitate the 3 Cs due to muscarinic blockade can be
remembered with the mnemonic All These Quirks Are Muscarinic Antagonists:
Antihistamines (1st generation)
TCAs
Quinidine
Amantadine
Meperidine (the oddball of the opioids that causes mydriasis due to muscarinic
block)
Antipsychotics chlorpromazine, thioridazine
Symptom: bleeding
22 questions
0
Agranulocytosis
Carbamazepine
Procainamide
Clozapine
Colchicine
less
less
In times of stress, infection or surgery, this can cause adrenal crisis and shock.
Anticholinergic syndrome
less
Cough
ACE Inhibitors
Not seen with Angiotension Receptor Blockers such as Losartan
Coronary vasospasm
Cocaine
Sumatriptan
Cholinergic syndrome
Carbachol, Bethanechol
less
less
less
Cutaneous flushing
Adenosine
Vancomycin (caused by histamine)
Niacin (caused by prostaglandins, hence NSAIDs are the treatment)
Digoxin
Dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (e.g. amlodipine, nifedipine)
Morphine
Rifampin
Sildenafil
SSRIs (e.g. escitaprolam, citaprolam, paroxetine)
Dilated Cardiomyopathy
Doxorubicin
Daunorubicin
Direct Coombs positive hemolytic anemia
Methyldopa
Disulfiram like reaction (especially when combined with alcohol)
less
Metronidazole
Sulfonylureas, 1st generation
Griseofulvin
Some cephalosporins
less
less
less
Procarbazine
Gout from uric acid excretion
Furosemide
less
Thiazides
Gingival hyperplasia
Phenytoin
Dihydropyridine Ca2+ channel blockers: amlodipine, nifedipine, etc.
Non-dihydropyrirdine Ca2+ channel blockers: verapamil, diltiazem
less
Cyclosporine
Gynecomastia
less
Can be remembered by mnemonic: Some Drugs Create Awesome Knockers
Spironolactone
Digitalis
Cimetidine
Alcohol
Ketoconazole
Gray baby syndrome
less
Chloramphenicol
G6PD hemolysis. Mnemonic: PAINS.
Primaquine
Aspirin and NSAIDs
Isoniazid
Nitrofurantoin
Sulfonamides
Hepatitis
Isoniazid
Hepatic Necrosis
Acetaminophen
Valproic Acid
Halothane
Cyclophosphamide
Interstitial nephritis
NSAIDS
Lithium
Demeclocycline
Aminoglycosides
Furosemide
Cisplatin
less
less
less
less
Quinolones
Pulmonary fibrosis
Amiodarone: pulmonary fibrosis will not resolve despite discontinuation of the
less
drug
Nitrofurantoin
less
Vancomycin
Photosensitivity
less
less
Methicillin
Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus
less
SLE-like syndrome
less
Sulfonylureas
Bactrim (trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole)
Thiazides
Furosemide
less
Celecoxib
Tendonitis
Fluoroquinolones
Torsades des pointes
less
less
Antipsychotics
Metoclopramide
less