PNS
SNS
Dynamics
Kinetics 1
Kinetics 2
100

What are the two classes of cholinergic postganglionic neuroreceptors

Nicotinic, muscarinic

100

Chronotropic

Heart rate


100

Define iatrogenic response

An adverse condition inadvertently induced in a patient by the treatment given

100

Define pharmacokinetics

What the body does to the medication


100

What is the most common plasma protein

Albumin

200

What does the PNS control

BP, Bladder, Cardiac, GI, Temp
200

Inotropic

Conduction velocity

200

Cumulative effect

increase effort of a drug given in several successive doses

200
4 factors that influence drug concentrations

Absorption, distribution, bioavailability, elimination


200

What is induction

Over time, liver can have an increase in enzyme activity which makes them need an increased dosing rate

300

SLUDGE

Salivation, lacrimation, urinary retention, drowsiness, GI issues, eye issues

300

Dromotropic

Strength of contraction


300

Summation effect

2 drugs, doubles the response

300

Define absorption

The transportation of the unmetabolized drug from the site of administration to the circulation system

300

What is inhibition

Some drugs can inhibit other drugs

400

Where does the PNS originate

Cranial and sacral regions (craniosacral)

400

A1

Contract smooth muscle

CNS stimulation

Blood vessels: vasoconstriction to nonessential organs

GI: relax smooth muscle and decrease motility

Liver: glyconeogenesis

Bladder: contraction

Uterus: contraction

Pupils: dilation

400

Synergism

2 drugs, response greater than the sum of their individual responses

400

Define distribution

process by which medication is distributed throughout the body

400

What are the five routes of elimination

kidneys, liver, intestines, lungs and sweat

500

FREE 500

YAY

500

A2

Vasodilation

500

Potentiation

 2 drugs that causes the effects of one drug to be enhanced

500
Define bioavailability

Ability of a drug or other chemical to be taken up by the body and made available in the tissue where it is needed


500

Most common routes of drug absorption

oral, enteral (ng tube), rectal, inhalation, IM, IN, subcutaneous, transdermal
600

Muscarinic vs nicotinic receptors

Muscarinic- inhibitory and excitatory, slow messengers

Nicotinic- excitatory, fast acting

600

Beta 1

Primarily stimulates heart with increased heart rate and contractility

Also causes kidneys to release renin

600

Affinity

Force of attraction between a drug and a receptor

600

Define first pass effect

If enteric, drug will be metabolized by liver first

600

Define passive transport

Molecules flow across the membrane by diffusion (no energy)
700
Primary sympathetic nerve
Vagus baby
700

Beta 2

Primarily relax smooth muscle

Blood vessels: vasodilation

Lungs: bronchodilation

GI: decreased motility

Liver: glyconeogenesis

Uterus: relaxation

700

 Efficacy

A drug’s ability to cause the expected response

700

What influences blood flow

Hypovolemia

Blockage

Constriction of vessels

Weak heart

700

Define active transport

Molecules are pumped across membrane (ATP required)

800

What neurotransmitter initiates PNS

Acetylcholine

800

Most common neurotransmitter in SNS

Norepi

800

Agonist

Drug that binds to a receptor and causes it to initiate the expected response

800

Define protein binding

Plasma protein binding refers to the degree to which medications attach to proteins within the blood. A drug's efficiency may be affected by the degree to which it binds. The less bound a drug is, the more efficiently it can traverse cell membranes or diffuse.

800

Factor4s that affect rate of absorption

1. Drug solubility 2. Drug concentration 3. Drug pH 4. Site of absorption 5. Absorbing surface area 6. Blood supply to site of absorption 7. Bioavailability

900

Where in the heart does the PNS deal with 

Atria


900

What receptors does norepi deal with

Alpha 1 and 2, Beta 1 only

900

Antagonist

Drug binds to a site but do not cause the expected response

900

Where does biotransformation occur

1. liver

2. kidneys

3. lungs

4. bloodstream (adenosine)

900

What is the blood brain barrier ineffective against

Fats, Fatty acids • Oxygen, CO2 • Fat soluble molecules • Anesthetics • Nicotine • Entonox • alcohol!