Term
Amlodipine, nimodipine, nifedipine (dihydropyridine); diltiazem, verapamil (non-dihydropyridine) |
|
Definition
Calcium Channel Blockers
Mechanism: Reduce muscle contractility via blocking voltage dependent L-type Ca+ channels on cardiac+smooth muscle
Clinical use:
Dihydropyridine (not nimodipine): HTN, angina (including prinzmetal), Raynaud phenomenon
Non-dihydropyridine: SA hemorrhage (prevents cerebral vasospasm
Nimodipine: SA hemorrhage (prevents cerebral vasospasm)
Tox: Cardiac depression, AV block, peripheral edema, flushing, dizziness, hyperprolactinemia and constipation; note no reflex tachy! |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Use: Severe HTN, CHF. First line therapy for HTN in pregnancy, with methyldopa. Frequently coadministered with β-blocker to prevent reflex tachy.
Mechanism: ↑cGMP -> smooth muscle relaxation. Vasodilates arteriole > veins; afterload reductions.
Tox: Compensatory tachy (contraindicated in angina/CAD), fluid retention, nausea, headache, angina. Lupus-like syndrome |
|
|
Term
Nitroglycerin Isosorbide Dinitrate |
|
Definition
Use: Angina (causes angina in OD too), pulmonary edema
Mechanism: Vasodilate by releasing NO in smooth muscle, causing ↑ in cGMP and smooth muscle relaxation. Dilate veins >> arteries ↓ preload
Tox: Reflex tachy, hypotension, flushing, headache, "Monday disease" in industrial exposure i.e. develope tolerance during week and lose it over the weekend, results in tachy, dizziness and headache upon reexposure. |
|
|
Term
Lovastatin, pravastatin, simvastatin, atorvastatin, soruvastatin |
|
Definition
HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors
Use: Lipid Lowering Agent
Mechanism: Inhibits cholesterol precursor, mevulonate
Effects: ↓↓↓ LDL; ↑HDL; ↓TAG
Side effects: Hepatotoxicity (↑ LFTs), rhabdomyolysis |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Use: Lipid Lowering Agent
Mechanism: Inhibits lipolysis in adipose tissue; reduces hepatic VLDL secretion into circulation
Effects: ↓↓ LDL; ↑↑HDL; ↓TAG
Side effects: Red, flushed face, which is ↓ by aspirin or long-term use; Hyperglycemia (acanthosis nigricans); Hyperuricemia (exacerbates gout) |
|
|
Term
Cholestyramine, Colestipol, Colesevelam |
|
Definition
Bile acid resins
Use: Lipid lowering agents
Mechanism: Prevent intestinal reabsorpiton of bile (and all other) acids; liver must use cholesterol to make more
Effects: ↓↓ LDL; slight ↑ HDL; slight ↑ TAG
Side effects: Pts hate it- tastes bad adn causes GI discomfort, ↓ absorption of fat-soluble vitamins; Cholesterol gallstones; Dx interactions with acidic drugs |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Cholesterol absorption blocker
Use: Lipid lowering agent
Mechanism: Prevent cholesterol reabsorption at small intestine
Effects: ↓↓ LDL; No HDL or TAG effect
Side effects: Rare ↑ LFT's |
|
|
Term
Gemfibrozil, Clofibrate, bezafibrate, fenofibrate |
|
Definition
"Fibrates"
Use: Lipid lowering agents
Mechanism: Upregulate LPL -> ↑TAG clearance
Effects: ↓ LDL; ↑HDL; ↓↓↓ TAG
Side effects: Myositis, hepatotoxicity (↑LFTs, cholesterol gallstones) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Cardiac Glycoside
Use: CHF (↑ contractility); a-fib (↓ conduction at AV node and depression of SA node)
Mechanism: Direct inhibition of Na+/K+ ATPase leads to indirect inhibition of Na/Ca exchanger/antiport. ↑Ca -> positive inotropy. Stimulate Vagus n.
PHK: Digox - 75% bioavailable, 20-40% protein bound, t1/2 = 40 hrs, urinary excretion
Tox:
Cholinergic (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, blurry yellow vision (think van gogh)
ECG-↑PR, ↓QT, scooping, T-wave inversion, arrhythmias, hyperkalemia.
Worsened by renal failure (↓excretion), hypokalemia (permissive for digoxin binding of K-binding site on Na/K ATPase), quinidine (↓digoxin clearance; displaces digosin from tissue binding sites)
Antidote: Slowly normalize K+, lidocaine, cardiace pacer, anti-dig Fab fragments, Mg2+ |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Use: Acute decompensated HF
Mechanism: Recombinant B-type natriuretic peptide. Causes ↑ in cGMP and vasodilation
Tox: Hypotension |
|
|
Term
Quinidine, Procainamide, Disopyramide |
|
Definition
Class IA Antiarrhythmic: Na channel blockers
"The Queen Proclaims Disco's pyramid"
Mechanism: Slow or block conduction (especially in depolarized cells).
Effects: ↑AP duration, ↑ effective refractory period (ERP), ↑QT interval. Affect both atrial and ventricular arrhytmias, especially recentrant and ectopic supraventricular and ventricular tachy.
Tox: quinidine (cinchonism- headache, tinnitus); procainamide (reversible SLE-like syndrom); disopyramide (HF); thrombocytopenia; torsades de pointes due to ↑QT interval
|
|
|