Diuretics
Teaching for Diuretics and Urinary Drugs
BPH and Overactive Bladder Drugs
Cholesterol and Blood Pressure Drugs
Angina, Heart Failure, and Dysrhythmia Drugs
100

These drugs increase urine output and help remove excess fluid from the body.

Diuretics
100

Patients taking diuretics should be taught to change positions slowly to prevent this.

Dizziness or orthostatic hypotension

100

Tamsulosin is commonly used to improve urine flow in this male urinary condition.

Benign prostatic hyperplasia or BPH

100

Atorvastatin, simvastatin, and rosuvastatin belong to this cholesterol-lowering drug class.

Statins

100

Nitroglycerin is commonly used to relieve chest pain caused by this condition.

Angina

200

Furosemide is an example of this powerful type of diuretic.

Loop diuretic

200

Patients taking diuretics may need monitoring of potassium, sodium, and other blood values called these.

Electrolytes

200

Dizziness and low blood pressure may occur with alpha-blockers such as this BPH medication.

Tamsulosin

200

Statins mainly help lower this “bad” cholesterol.

LDL cholesterol

200

Patients taking nitroglycerin should sit or lie down because the drug may cause this.

Low blood pressure, dizziness, or fainting

300

Hydrochlorothiazide is an example of this type of diuretic often used for hypertension.

Thiazide diuretic

300

Patients taking furosemide may need to report muscle weakness, cramps, or irregular heartbeat because these may suggest this problem.

Potassium Imbalance

300

Oxybutynin, tolterodine, and solifenacin are used to treat this urinary problem.

Overactive bladder

300

Muscle pain, weakness, or dark urine while taking a statin should be reported because it may indicate this serious problem.

Muscle injury or rhabdomyolysis

300

Digoxin may be used in heart failure and certain dysrhythmias, but toxicity may cause nausea, vision changes, confusion, or this heart rate problem.

Bradycardia

400

Spironolactone is this type of diuretic that helps the body keep potassium.

Potassium-sparing diuretic

400

Patients taking diuretics are often taught to take them earlier in the day to reduce this nighttime problem.

Nocturia or nighttime urination

400

Finasteride and dutasteride help shrink the prostate over time and are used for this condition.

Benign prostatic hyperplasia or BPH

400

Lisinopril, enalapril, and captopril belong to this blood pressure drug class.

ACE inhibitors

400

Amiodarone, adenosine, and lidocaine are examples of drugs used to treat this type of heart rhythm problem.

Dysrhythmias

500

Dizziness, dehydration, low blood pressure, and electrolyte imbalance are possible side effects or adverse effects of these drugs.

Diuretics

500

Daily weights can help patients with heart failure monitor this problem.

Fluid retention

500

Dry mouth, constipation, blurred vision, and urinary retention may occur with these overactive bladder drugs.

Anticholinergic drugs

500

A dry cough, high potassium, low blood pressure, and angioedema are possible adverse effects of this blood pressure drug class.

ACE inhibitors

500

Before giving many cardiac drugs, especially digoxin or some antidysrhythmics, the nurse should assess this vital sign.

Apical pulse or heart rate

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