Patho-Pharm Basics
Infection/Pain and Inflammation
Respiratory
CV
MISC
100

a patient who has been taking 5 mg of hydromorphone for 3 weeks is no longer receiving adequate pain relief.

what is tolerance

100

1 thing you shouldn't take with Isoniazid and 2 ADRs

ADRs:

Liver damage (hepatitis & failure), Peripheral Neuropathy (B6 issues), N/V, CNS issues, DRESS

-Never take it with antacids, alcohol, increase liver tox with rifampin

100
1 important client education on administration of guaifenesin, and what is one instance that you should immediately DC this med

-drink water with this medication and encourage fluid, helps thin secretions and help expectorate secretions!

-if a rash, DC

100

2 symptoms of left sided heart failure and 2 symptoms of right sided heart failure

Left-Sided Heart Failure (lungs = backing up into pulmonary system):

  • Dyspnea / shortness of breath

  • Crackles (pulmonary congestion)

Right-Sided Heart Failure (systemic venous backup):

  • Peripheral edema

  • Jugular vein distention (JVD)

100

2 major ADRs when taking atorvastatin

-Rhabdo/Myopathy

-Liver dysfunction

-also cataracts, HA, GI upset, Glaucoma


200

an example of Atrophy, hypertrophy, and hyperplasia

Atrophy → cells shrink
Example: muscle wasting in a cast, immobility

Hypertrophy → cells get bigger
Example: enlarged heart muscle from HTN, lifting

Hyperplasia → more cells
Example: uterus growth in pregnancy, BPH

200

This chemical mediator greatly assists the vascular phase of inflammation. Also, give an example of natural active immunity and natural passive immunity

-Histamine

Example of natural active immunity:
Immunity after recovering from an infection (like getting chickenpox and developing antibodies)

Example of natural passive immunity:
Maternal antibodies passed to a baby through the placenta or breast milk

200

the process of using a MDI (looking for at least 3 steps) and what you would do when giving both albuterol and a glucocorticoid 

  • Shake the inhaler

  • Exhale fully before placing mouthpiece

  • Press inhaler while inhaling slowly (3-5 seconds) and deeply

  • Hold breath ~10 seconds

  • Wait ~1 minute between puffs if more than one dose

-Dilate then steroid


200

for propranolol, what do we want to monitor before giving this med and want to we want to teach when stopping the med and why

Monitor before giving:

  • Heart rate (below what is a concern?)

  • Blood pressure

Stopping teaching:

  • Do not stop abruptly — taper dose

  • Prevents rebound tachycardia, hypertension, chest pain, and MI

200

how does narcan work and what is a concern when giving this med to someone who has overdosed

-It knocks opioids off the opioid receptors (especially μ receptors) and reverses respiratory depression. 

-Opioids withdraw symptoms (abstinence syndrome)

300

The purpose of both EC and ER meds and one thing you should never do to them

EC- Coating protects the stomach and allows the drug to dissolve in the intestine instead.

ER- Releases medication slowly over time to maintain steady drug levels and reduce how often it’s taken.

-Never chew, break, or crush them

300

Gentamycin is know to cause nephrotoxicity, what do we want to educate the patient to report, how long is the typical med regimen, and what is one other ADR for gentamycin

-Educate patient to report dilute urine (also encourage them to drink fluids). Gonna want frequent renal labs

-no longer than 10 days--> monitor peaks and troughs

-Vertigo and Ototoxicity

300

how does dextromethorphan work, what is something we should look for in the patients medical history pertaining to this med

How it works:

  • Suppresses the cough reflex by acting on the cough center in the medulla (central antitussive)

What to check in history:

  • History of substance misuse/abuse
    (It’s found in cough syrups and can be misused in high doses.) also if they are taking CNS depressants

300

What is an important nursing intervention for the administration of Furosemide, give me 2 ADRs

Administer the medication slowly to avoid ototoxicity. ADRs can be electrolyte imbalance, dehydration, increase uric acid, hypotension, hyperglycemia

300

a patient with TB needs to be put in what room, also what are 2 ADRs and 2 ways it can be diagnosed

-airborne isolation, negative pressure room

-night sweats, bloody cough, fatigue, weight loss, afternoon sweats, crackles, pleuritic pain

-Chest x-ray, acid fast-sputum culture, QuantiFERON test, ppd

400

The difference between expressivity and penetrance

Penetrance → IF a gene shows up
 How many people with the gene actually show the trait. Example: 80% penetrance = 8/10 people with the mutation have the condition.

Expressivity → HOW MUCH the gene shows
 Degree or severity of symptoms
 Example: Same disorder, one person mild symptoms, another severe.

400

The order of hormones that causes cortisol to be released and how that process comes to a halt and 2 effects that cortisol has on the body

Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenal (HPA) Axis (order): CRH (hypothalamus) → ACTH (pituitary) → Cortisol (adrenal cortex)

How it stops: Negative feedback — rising cortisol suppresses CRH and ACTH release.

Two effects of cortisol:

Suppresses immune/inflammatory response, Raises blood glucose, Inhibits Osteoblast, body more responsive to catecholamines, suppresses protein and collagen synthesis, bronchioles dilate, CO increases

400

how long does ipratropium take to work (does not need to be exact), what disorder is it best at treating, and what are 2 ADRs

Ipratropium

  • Onset: fast acting but slower than albuterol

  • Best for: COPD (maintenance bronchodilation)

Two ADRs:

  • Dry mouth

  • Urinary retention (anticholinergic effect)

  • increased ocular pressure

400

This electrolyte imbalance potentiates digoxin toxicity, and name 3 signs of dig toxicity

What is hypokalemia, with signs such as nausea/vomiting, yellow-green visual halos, and bradycardia (dysrhythmias)?

400

a patient gets stung by a bee and has auditory wheezing-->what is the priority action for the nurse, what kind of hypersensitivity reaction is this, and what is it mediated by

-Give epi

-type 1

-igE

500

The 4 aspects of pharmacokinetics and one thing that effects each

A — Absorption- One thing that affects it: Route of administration
(Example: IV = immediate, oral slower due to GI factors) 

D — Distribution, One thing that affects it: Plasma protein binding
(Drugs bound to albumin can’t easily leave the bloodstream) 

M — Metabolism, One thing that affects it: First-pass effect in the liver
(Liver can metabolize oral drugs before they reach circulation)

E — Excretion, One thing that affects it: Renal function
(Kidneys filter drugs out; poor kidney function slows elimination)

500

The ASPIRIN pneumonic for ADRs

A - asthma

S - salicylates intolerance

P - peptic ulcers

I - intestinal/gastro bleeding

R - Reye’s syndrome (kids) I - increased GI discomfort

N - noise (tinnitus @ high dose = earliest sign of toxicity)

-Also want to monitor kidney labs, DC 7 days before surgery,

500

2 risk factors for Pneumonia, what it causes, 1 diagnosis, 1 treatment

2 Risk Factors for Pneumonia

  • Smoking

  • Impaired swallowing/aspiration risk

  • Chronic disease

  • immobility

  • immunosuppression

  • recent respiratory illness

  • Old age

What it causes:
Inflammation and fluid/pus in the alveoli → impaired gas exchange

1 Diagnosis:
-Chest X-ray

-Blood culture

-Sputum culture

1 Treatment:
-Antibiotics (if bacterial)

-IV fluids

-respiratory meds

500

The hallmark sign of pericarditis and 2 other clinical manifestation. 3 clinical Manifestations of endocarditis

Pericarditis:

Pericardial friction rub (audible sound) squeaky leathery sound– Hallmark sign of Pericarditis.

• Sharp chest pain with deep inspiration relieved by sitting up & leaning forward

• Dyspnea

• Tachycardia

• Edema

• Flu like symptoms (fever, rigors, myalgias)

• ST elevation in all leads

Endocarditis:

Flu like symptoms, symptoms related to

embolization (MI, PE, etc.), heart murmur,

petechiae, splinter hemorrhages under

nails

500

For gluccocorticoids, name 1 inhaled ADR and what you should do to prevent it, 3 oral ADRs, and 1 nasal ADR. 

Inhaled- oral candidias--> rinse mouth after administration

Oral- suppression of adrenal glands (TAPER), bone demineralization, PUD, hyperglycemia, infection

nasal- dry membranes, sore throat, epistaxis, HA

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