Term
heparin: mechanism of action |
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Definition
- bind to antithrombin III
- opens up the active site of antithrombin III
- acelerates the rate of formation of ATIII:X and ATIII:II
- decrease the amount of active X, II
- decreases formation of fibrin clot
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Term
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Definition
- strongly acidic
- repeating units of D-glucoronic acid and sulfated D-glucosamine or L-iduronic acid
- naturally occuring polysaccharide
- prepared from porcine intestines or bovine lung
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Term
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Definition
- parenteral administration
- with immediate onset when given IV
- never give orally
- cleared and degraded mainly by reticuloendothelial system
- metabolized by liver
- distribution- does NOT cross placenta (SAFE IN PREGNANCY)
- plasma half life is dose dependent: 1-5 hrs
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Term
heparin: adverse effects and how to avoid |
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Definition
- bleeding (MAJOR)
- hypersensitivity rxn- fever, rash urticaria
- transient thrombocytopenia
- heparin induced thrombocytopenia
- rare- severe thrombocytopenia
Monitor anticoagulant action by seeing if you can keep aPTT at 2x its control |
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Term
heparin induced thrombocytopenia (HIT): mechanism and alternative to heparin |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
- prevent DVT/PE esp. in hip surgery
- acute MI
- unstable angina
- prevent thrombosis in extracorporeal devices (ex: stents)
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Term
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Definition
- hypersensitivity
- active bleeding
- intracranial hemorrhage
- GI ulceration
- threatened abortion
- infective endocarditis
- surgical procedures in general
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Term
protamine: function, adverse effects, toxicity, mechanism of action |
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Definition
- chemistry- highly basic peptide (positive charge, and remember, heparin has a negative charge)
- mechanism- heparin antagonist
- ion pairs with heparin to form a stable complex devoid of anticoagulant activity
- adverse effects
- dyspnea
- bradycardia
- hypotension
- toxicity- excessively by itself, produces anticoagulant activity
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Term
Name the drugs that are LMWH |
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Definition
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Term
LMWH: mechanism of action |
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Definition
same as unfractionated heparin, but it is highly selective for factor Xa because of its lower molecular weight |
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Term
LMWH: PK (especially compare to unfractionated heparin) |
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Definition
- longer half life than generic heparin
- improved bioavailability after subQ administration permits use of fixed dosage without much need for routine monitoring of acitivity
- half life: 3-6 hrs
- QD dosing
- excreted in urine
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
- bleeding (same as unfractionated)
- HIT (less frequent than unfractionated)
- allergic rxns- urticaris, skin necrosis at injection site
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Term
Fondaparinux- chemistry and functional significance |
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Definition
- synthetic analog of heparin
- due to pentasaccharide binding sequence
- allows it to inhibit X with no effect on II
- also does not bind platelet 4, so does not cause HIT
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Term
Fondaparinux: indications |
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Definition
- px of PE/DVT
- thrombopx for patients undergoing hip or knee surgery
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Term
Fondaparinux: adverse effects and PK |
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Definition
- adverse effects
- bleeding
- thrombocytopenia
- PK
- half life: 17-21 hrs
- QD dosing
- subQ administration
- no monitoring needed
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Term
Lepirudin: mechanism of action and chemistry |
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Definition
- directly complex with thrombin (1:1) with little effect on related serine proteases (ex: X)
- inhibits fibrin bound thrombin and soluble thrombin
Remember, this is the recombinant form of hirudin (from leeches) |
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Term
lepirudin: PK, indications, adverse rxns |
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Definition
- indications- thrombosis related to HIT
- PK
- parenterally administered
- short half life: 1-2 hrs (accumulate in renal insufficiency, so dosage adjust)
- adverse rxn
- Ab formed to it (thrombin-lepirudin complex) that are not cleared
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Term
Bilvaridin: mechanism of action, indications, PK |
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Definition
- mechanism of action- like lepirudin, direct inhibitor derived from hirudin
- PK
- short acting half life: 25 minutes
- coagulation time returns to baseline one hr after drug is stopped
- indication- angioplasty
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Term
Argatroban: chemistry, indication, mechansim of action, APK, adverse rxns |
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Definition
- chemistry- synthetic derivative of arginine
- indication- anticoagulant in pts with h/o HIT
- mechanism- reversibly block catalytic site of thrombin (both soluble and clot bound)
- PK- metabolized by P450
- dosage adjust- liver disease
- adverse rxn
- hematuria
- allergic rxns
- hemorrhage
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Term
warfarin: mechanism of action and which enantiomer form is more active |
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Definition
- inhibits VKORCI (as structural analong of vitamin K)
- this decreases the amount of vitamin K that is reduced and can be used
- this decreases carboxylation of viatmin K dependent factors leading to the decrease of:
- first, VII
- second, IX
- thrid, X
- and finally, II
- this will as well decrease protein C in the first few weeks
Most active in S enantiomer form. |
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Term
warfarin: adverse reactions |
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Definition
- bleeding
- hemorrhagic disorder in fetus
- serious birth defects due to abnormal bone formation
- CI: pregnancy
- cutaneous necrosis with reduced activity of protein C in first few weeks of pregnancy (leads to procoagulant state)
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Term
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Definition
- 100% bioavailable (99% protein bound)
- half life: 36 hrs
- extensively metabolized via CYP29 to hydroxylated metabolites and excreted in urine
- distribution: cross placenta
- administered as sodium salt
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Term
Name some of the various drug rxns undergone by warfarin |
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Definition
- phenobarbitol induces P450 leading to increase in metabolism, decrease warfarin levels
- sulfonamides inhibit P450 leading to decrease metabolism, increase warfarin levels
- sulfonamides also decrease binding of plasma protein, leading to increase in free warfarin
- aspirin interferes with normal platelet function, so we would get an intensified anticoagulant function
- cholestyramine binds to warfarin and blocks its absorption from the GI tract, decrease warfarin levels
- vitamin K in large doses can restore normal activity of clotting factors, leading to reversal of warfarin action
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Term
aspirin: mechanism of action |
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Definition
- irreversible acetylation of Ser residdues at COX-1 and COX-2
- leads to blocking access of arachidonic acid to active site of cyclooxygenases
- decrease cyclooxygenase activity
- decrease TXA activity, which inhibit platelet adhesion and aggregation
- effect last 7-10 days (platelets have no nucleus)
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Term
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Definition
- px/therapy of thromboembolism
- MI
- post MI
- transient cerebral ischemia
- unstable angina
- coronary bypass surgery
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Term
Name the antiplatelet agents |
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Definition
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Term
Clopidogrel: mechanism of action, synergy with what drug |
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Definition
- inhibits P2Y1 OR P2Y12 (separate purine R's)
- inhibits ADP mediated activation of platelets
Synergy with aspirin
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Term
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Definition
- alternative for those who cannot tolerate aspirin (this drug has no effect on PG path)
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Term
clopidogrel: adverse effects |
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Definition
- very few (replaced ticlopidine as alternative to aspirin)
- lower risk of neutropenia
- rash
- abdominal pain and dyspepsia
- thrombotic thrombocytopenia
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Term
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Definition
- well absorbed
- extensively metabolized by liver
- half life= 8 hrs
- urine and fecal elimination
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Term
ticlodipine: drug interactions |
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Definition
- antacids decrease its absorption
- cimitidine decrease clearance
- increases the half life of theophyline
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Term
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Definition
- block GPIIb/IIIa
- leads to decrease in anchoring of platelets
- decrease in receptors for fibrinogen and vWF
- decrease aggregation
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Term
abciximab: adverse effects and indications |
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Definition
- indications- angioplasty adjunct therapy to prevent re-stenosis of treated coronary artery
- adverse reactions
- bleeding at arterial access site
- GI, GU, retroperitoneal bleeding
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Term
Name the thrombolytic agents |
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Definition
streptokinase
alteplase (aka tPA) |
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Term
thrombolytic drugs: mechanism of action |
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Definition
- increase tPA
- this will increase activation of plasminogen to plasmin (must overcome PAI and alpha 2 antiplasmin to do this)
- degrade fibrin to fibrin split products
- degrade fibrinogen
- leads to lysing of thrombosis
- cause restoration of tissue perforation
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Term
streptokinase: unique mechanism traits |
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Definition
- form stable 1:1 complex with plasminogen
- confirmation change to expose plasminogen active site leading to activation to plasmin
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Term
alteplase: unique mechanism traits |
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Definition
- bind fibrin and activate plasminogen bound to fibrin-tPA complex (show clot specificity)
- cause increase in activation of circulating plasminogen
- cause increase in activation of clot bound plasmin
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Term
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Definition
- half life: 5-15 minutes due to hepatitic proteolytic degradation being rapid
- IV adminstration
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Term
thrombolytic drugs: adverse reaction |
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Definition
- hemorrhagic stroke
- CI: active bleeding, recent stroke, recent major surgery, severe HTN
- lysis of protective thrombi can also occur
- allergy (streptokinase only because Ab's are developed leading to HS rxns)- only use this drug every 6-12 months
- fever
- rash
- anaphylatic rxn
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