Lifespan Considerations
Medication Concepts
Drug Regulation
Med Concepts Cont'd
(Blank)
100

any medication taken can reach the developing fetus, the 1st trimester is the period of greatest risk and the 3rd trimester highest % of drug absorption

What is pregnancy via reproduction?  

100

drug's chemical composition and molecular structure and is not used inna clinical setting

what is chemical drug name? 

100

drugs that are regulated by the FDA and must be prescribed by a healthcare professional because they require periodic monitoring

what are prescription (RX) meds? 

100

established in 1973 by the Controlled Substance Act to regulate drugs that may lead to dependency or abuse

What is DEA?

100

a genetic polymorphism where the drug is metabolized really fast; codeine is turned into morphine

what is ultra-rapid metabolizer patients? 

200

A vast number of drugs that are lipid soluble, small molecular, non-ionized can enter breast/chest milk. Avoid long-acting drugs and take medications IMMEDIATELY AFTER feeding. 

what is breastfeeding via reproduction? 

200

the active ingredient inna drug and mainly used in a clinical setting; this name will NEVER change

what is the generic name? 

200

pre-approved FDA approved meds that are generally safe and don't require periodic monitoring

what are non-prescription/OTC meds? 

200

Classification system used to rank controlled substances (abuse/misuse potential, medical use, and dependency potential) 

what are the DEA schedules? 

200

genetic polymorphism where drug is slowly metabolized so it doesn't work and stays in the body

What are poor metabolizer patients? 

300

Medications that pose a great harm to fetus such as Isotretinoin (Accutane) 

What is reproductive potential? 

300

Registered trademark by manufacturer (this name varies) 

what os brand/trade name? 

300

not regulated by FDA but by 3rd party manufacturers/distributors 

what are dietary supplements such as vitamins, herbals, and homeopathic meds? 

300

Requires a DEA license if they want to prescribe a controlled substance

what is prescribing authority?  

400

Decreased gastric acid production and slower emptying time 

More blood flow to skin so topical drugs get rapidly absorbed

Have limited binding sites <1 yrs old 

Blood Brain barrier not fully developed 

Dilute water soluble drugs rapidly due to high body water content

Liver and kidneys are immature

what is neonates pharmacokinetic differences? 

400

drugs that are 80-125% effective 

what is bioequivalance?

400

not available to the public during phase 1-3, only available in phase 4

what is the FDA clinical trial phase? 

400

limited quantities and refills of certain medications; schedule 2 cannot get refills, they require a new prescription for each bottle

What are prescribing limitation? 

500

Polypharmacy is common but is reduced by Medication reconciliation (critical)

decreased dgastric acid production and slower emptying time

Decreased body water and mass but higher fat content; decreased protein binding and liver function 

Beers Criteria 

What is geriatric pharmacokinetics?

500

4% difference of a therapeutic drugs efficacy; patients should use the same manufacturer to ensure the product effect stays consistent

what are seizure, thyroid, and transplant meds under the narrow therapeutic index? 

500

benefits outweigh the risks (particularly for certain populations) 

Example: Isotretinoin/Accutane which is highly teratogenic so must confirm negative pregnancy test before administration, during therapy, and 1 month after discontinuation

What is the REMS Program? 

500

The study of how genetic differences in a single gene influence variability in drug response

what is pharmacogenetics? 

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