Name the 2 absorption drug effects?
Local- at the site- inhaler, SL, buccal
Systemic- in bloodstream- PO, IV,
What is the supportive drug effect?
Supportive- supports integrity of body function ex. Tylenol for fever
Palliative- relieves s/s of disease with no effect on disease itself- Ex morphine
Substitutive- replace either body fluids or chemical ex- Synthroid
Chemotherapeutic? destroys disease producing microorganisms- Ex Chemo, Abx
Restorative- return the body to or maintain optimal level Ex Vitamins
Differentiate between chemical, generic and brand name of a drug?
Chemical= chemical composition
Generic= nonproprietary name
Brand= proprietary name, drug company registered trademark
Name types of technology that prevents errors
Barcode of medication, Smart pumps, Automated dispensing cabinets, Computerized prescriber order entry
Acetaminophen 650 p.o. every 6 hours prn temperature 101.5
Is drug order complete?
No, missing mg
What is potency?
Amount of drug needed to elicit a specific physiologic effect
Drug response
Therapeutic effect
Maximal efficacy
The nurse checks the mediation at least how many times prior to administrtaion?
3 Before you pour, after you pour and at the bedside
What is biotransformation?
Change or break down of medication into a less active/potent form or inactive form
Done by liver enzymes- First Pass effect PO meds
A physiological drug effect which is unintended but is predictable. Primary reason patients stop a mediation
Side effect
Primary or Secondary (ex diphenhydramine)
How many control substance categories are there and define?
5, I High potential for abuse, unsafe/illegal (ectasy, LSD, Heroin)
II- high abuse potential, severe dependence (Morphin, Ritalin, Oxycodone, Cocaine, Methadone)
III less potential for abuse, moderate dependence (Codeine, hydrocodone, anabolic steroids, testosterone)
IV- Low abuse, limited dependence (lorazepam, tramadol, temazepam- sleep nerve pills)
V Lower abuse, limited dependence Cough med, diarrheal meds iwth opiod
Give some examples of why errors occur?
Confusion of similar drug names, lack of knowledge, faulty communication, equipment error, drug calc error, Pt ID not checked, Nurse bypass safety protocols (2 RN insulin), Nurse fatigue, distraction or interruption
Atropine 5 mg IV Stat,
Is this order complete, and when do you give it
yes, Immediately
Now is within 90 minutes
Peak action
Onset of action- time needed for drug concentration to reach a high enough blood level to cause physiological effect
Duration of action-Length of time a drug exerts a pharmacologic effect-- HALF LIFE
Therapeutic range- relationship between therapeutic dose and toxic does- Narrow or wide index
Six Rights
Patient, drug, dose, route, time, documentation
Factors effect Absorption??
Route of administration, Drug solubility (XL, Enteric coated, lipid vs water soluble), Acid vs alkaline environment.
Stress, hunger, pain, fasting, presence or absence of food/stool, Food texture, fat content and temperature
Drug level exceeds therapeutic range and may cause a damaging effect to organs or tissues.
Toxic effect or Drug toxicity
Stock supply or unit dose?
Stock= Bulk quantity, central location, cost effective
Unit dose= individually packaged, client specific
Drugs that appear on these 2 lists are meds the nurse should use with precaution in the elderly?
High Alert Meds (heparin, insulin, hypnotics) and BEERS Criteria
Black Box Warning= strongest form of warning issued about a drug
After the nurse takes a telephone order from a healthcare provider the nurse has to preform what next?
Read back and verify the order R?V
When is a trough lever drawn?
30 to 60 minutes prior to next scheduled dose of medication
When should the nurse give a patient an oral medication?
Pt N&V, lack of gag reflex, Decrease LOC, Dysphagia until speech therapy evals (risk for aspiration), NPO status,
factors which effect excretion include:
Kidney function, Age, other drugs, urinary PH, half-life
3 Causes of drug toxicity
Overdosing, Accumulation of drug in tissues, Abnormal sensitivity or allergic response
Differentiate between prescription and OTC drug?
Prescribed require health care provider to write it
OTC- go to CVS Walgreens
DOPamine DOBUTamine
Tall man lettering
Look Alike Sound Alike Drug Names
Flagyl 10 mg po ac
When do you administer ibis medication?
Yes, give prior to meals
A drug is given once a day if it has a short or long half life?
Long
Principles of transdermal patch
Rotate sites, Date, initial and time patch, Do not cut. Remove old before apply new, Provides consistent blood level, Avoids GI upset, Clean area prior to application
Wash hands wear gloves
Factors effect distribution?
Circulatory system function, Membrane permeability (blood brain and placenta), protein binding sites, Free drug
Signs of anaphylactic shock
Wheezes, tachycardia, hypotension, rash/hives, cough, dyspnea, swollen eyes, lips or tongue, Edema of phyrnx and larnyx
Regulates medication before and after market
Identifies the most accurate medication list on admission, Compare patient's medication orders to home medications, Done to avoid errors, omission, dosing errors and drug interactions
Medication Reconcillation
1000 and 2200
0900 and 2100
A medication dose used when immediate drug response is desired, large, safe initial dose?
Loading dose
Name 4 herbs that decrease platelet aggregation potentially causing bleeding
Garlic, Ginkgo biloba, Ginger
Ginseng- watch with DM and hypoglycemia
Kava Kava- liver toxicity
Saw Palmetto- interfere with enlarged prostate meds
St John's Wart- watch for interaction with mental health drugs
Valerian- Mild sedative like valium