Aminoglycosides
Narrow Therapeutic Indexes
Metabolism
Excretion
Labs
100

The type of medication aminoglycosides are

Antibiotic

100

The reason we maintain dosages within a strict therapeutic range

To avoid unacceptable toxicities

100

The major site for metabolism

Liver

100

The organ most responsible for excretion

Kidney

100

Name 2 blood tests that assess kidney function

BUN, urea, creatinine, eGFR

200

The 3 most common aminoglycosides

Gentamicin, tobramycin and amikacin

200

What likelihood is increased when using medications with narrow therapeutic indexes

adverse reactions

200

What is metabolism?

biochemical alteration of a drug into any of the following:

inactive metabolite, more soluble compound, more potent metabolite

200

2 organs that are not the primary that play a role in excretion of drugs

The liver and the bowel

200

What is the trough level of a drug?

The lowest blood level of a drug (taken right before the next dose is administered)

300

The 2 types of complications associated with aminoglycosides

Nephrotoxicity and Ototoxicity

300

What is the onset?

The amount of drug to get minimal effective concentration

300

The enzymes involved in hepatic metabolism

Cytochrome p450

300

What changes made to drugs by the liver make it easier for kidneys to eliminate them

Drugs become more polar and water-soluble. The urinary tract is water-based

300

What are 2 drugs with narrow therapeutic indexes?

warfarin, heparin, phenytoin, digoxin, lithium, cyclosporine, methotrexate, carbamazepine

400

The minimum inhibitory concentration

The lowest concentration of drug needed to kill a standard amount of bacteria

400

What is drug concentration?

Amount of drug in a given volume of blood plasma

400

What happens to a prodrug when it is metabolized

It's converted to its active form

400

What is the half-life

The amount of time required for serum drug levels to be reduced by one-half during the elimination phase

400

What is diagnostic testing of drug concentrations in the blood useful for assessing? (name 1)

-adequate concentrations to achieve therapeutic effect are being achieved

- if potentially toxic concentrations are being reached

-patients are adhering to the prescribed medication regimen

500

The dosing is adjusted based on this

The patient's level of kidney function, based on estimated of creatinine clearance
500

The ratio of these two things are referred to as the drug's therapeutic index

the ratio of a drug's toxic level to the level that provides therapeutic benefits

500

2 variables that can affect drug metabolism

Age, Drugs, Disease, Genetics

500

2 variables that can affect drug elimination

Age, disease (renal failure), drug toxicity, genetics

500

You have a peak level of a drug that is 240mg/mL. The half life is 4 hrs. What will the measured level of the drug be in 8 hrs. 

60 mg/mL