Name that suffix
Acute Coronary Syndrome
Miscellaneous
Antibiotics
Meds and Labs
100

-olol

Beta Blocker

Metoprolol, bisoprolol

Use: lower/slow HR, reduce arrythmias 

100

What is the first line for all ACS patients?

ASA

Antiplatelet therapy

Reduces mortality; prevents clot progression

100
Why is metformin held for 48hrs prior to an angiogram?

To reduce risk of AKI.

Metformin is excreted by the kidneys. Contrast dye can temporarily reduce kidney function. If kidneys are impaired and metformin accumulates= increased risk of lactic acidosis.

100

This antibiotic can cause red man syndrome if infused too quickly.

Vancomycin

100

This medication requires a PTT to initiate treatment and 6 hours after.

IV Heparin

200

-pril

ACE Inhibitor

Lisinopril, enalapril

Use: lower BP, reduce afterload

200

What is the class of medications used to lower LDL levels?

HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors

ie: atorvastatin, rosuvastatin

200

What medication has the side effect of ototoxicity if given too quickly?

Furosemide

200

A patient on antibiotics develops oral thrush. This is likely due to what complication?

Fungal overgrowth/disruption of normal flora.

200

When giving furosemide, what lab values should be monitored?

Lytes (specifically Na and K), Crea, GFR

300

- sartan

ARBs- Angiotensin II receptor blockers

Losartan, valsartan

Use: lower BP, manage HF, alternative when pt does not tolerate ACE (cough)

300

Name a P2Y12 inhibitor and why it is used

Ticagrelor, Clopidogrel

Often given with aspirin 

Used to prevent further platelet activation and stent thrombosis.

300

These drugs decrease heart rate, reduce myocardial oxygen demand, and require monitoring of HR and BP.

Beta Blockers

300

In a patient with sepsis, it is ok to give antibiotics before blood cultures are drawn. True or false?

False. Antibiotics can break through cell walls of bacteria within 20 minutes and will skew the blood culture results.

300

This electrolyte sometimes increases with pip-taz use, especially in renally impaired patients.

Na

Each gram of pip taz contains a significant amount of sodium.

Kidneys normally excrete excess sodium; in renal impairment, this does not happen as effectively leading to Na accumulating in the blood= hypernatremia.

400

-dipine

Calcium channel blocker

Amlodipine, Nifedipine

Use: lower BP, vasodilation, good for HTN and angina


400

Name 5 classes of medication all NSTEMI patients will be on

Beta Blocker

Antiplatelet

Statin

Anticoagulation

Pain/Ischemic relief ie nitro or morphine

400

What clinical implications would help decide if a patient is on oral anticoagulation, subcutaneous or IV?

Oral: use when patient is stable and long term prevention is needed. ie: afib, long term DVT/PE tx/prevention

**stable=oral**

SC: use when predictable anticoagulation is needed quickly, but pt is stable. **predictable, practical=SC**   ie: tx DVT/PE, bridging to warfarin, prophylaxis when admitted to hospital. Enoxaparin

IV: used when fast, high control anticoagulation is needed or pt is unstable. Indications: ACS, massive PE, when rapid on/off control is needed (ie surgery), Afib with RVR and high clot risk.

400

A patient on broad spectrum antibiotics isn't improving after 48hrs. What are the next steps?

Review culture and sensitivity results and narrow down therapy.

400

Before giving vancomycin, check this lab value to prevent nephrotoxicity.

Creatinine/BUN

500

-arone

Antiarrhythmics

Amiodarone

Use: Afib, VT/VF managemement

500

Name a reperfusion related medication used in STEMIs

tpa, alteplase

500

Name 5 medications given to treat liver failure.

1. Lactulose: treats hepatic encephalopathy

2. Rifaximin: reduces gut bacteria and used to prevent hepatic encephalopathy.

3. Diuretics: treat ascites and edema associated with liver failure.

4. Beta blockers: prevents variceal bleeding by reducing portal hypertension.

5. PPI: prevent stress ulcers/GI bleeding in advanced liver disease.


500

This is a broad spectrum antibiotic combination of a penicillin + a _______

Beta-lactamase inhibitor.

500

A patient on corticosteroids should be monitored for these two metabolic changes.

Hyperglycemia- increase gluconeogensis in the liver so more glucose is prduced. They also decrease peripheral glucose uptake by muscle and fact= insulin resistance.

Hypokalemia- have mineralocorticoid activity (increase NA retention and K+ excretion) and increase renal potassium excretion= low serum K+