Chapter 6: Basic Pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

Orphan drugs

A

The federal government offers incentives to pharmaceutical companies to research drugs for rare diseases. Drugs usually less profitable and hard to manufacture.

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2
Q

Drug

A

Chemical used to diagnose, treat, or prevent disease.

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3
Q

Pharmacology

A

The study of drugs and their interactions with the body.

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4
Q

What are the four main sources of drugs?

A

Plants, animals, minerals, and laboratory(synthetic).

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5
Q

Drug inserts

A

Printed fact sheets that drug manufacturers supply with most medications

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6
Q

Pharmacokinetics

A

How a drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and excreted; how drugs are transported into and out of the body.

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7
Q

Pharmacodynamics

A

How a drug interacts with the body to cause its effects.

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8
Q

Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906

A

Improve the quality and labeling of drugs named the United States Pharmacopeia as the country’s source for drug information.

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9
Q

Harrison Narcotic Act of 1914

A

Limited the indiscriminate use of addicting drugs by regulating the importation, manufacture, sale, and use of opium, cocaine, and their compounds or derivatives.

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10
Q

Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938

A

Empowered the FDA to enforce and set premarket safety standards for drugs.

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11
Q

Durham-Humphrey Amendments to the 1938 act

A

Required pharmacist to have a written or verbal prescription from a physician to dispense certain drugs.

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12
Q

Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970

A

Repealed and replaced the Harrison Narcotic Act

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13
Q

Controlled Substance Act of 1970

A

Created five schedules of controlled substances, each with its own level of control and record keeping requirements.

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14
Q

Assay

A

Test that determines the amount and purity of a given chemical in a preparation in the laboratory.

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15
Q

Bioequivalence

A

Relative therapeutic effectiveness of chemically equivalent drugs.

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16
Q

Bioassay

A

Test to ascertain a drugs availability in a biological model.

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17
Q

What are the six rights in order?

A
Right Person
Right Drug
Right Dose
Right Time
Right Route
Right Documentation
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18
Q

Schedule I Drug

A

High abuse potential; may lead to severe dependance; no accepted medical indications; used for research, analysis, or instruction only.
Heroin, LSD, mescaline

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19
Q

Schedule II Drug

A

High abuse potential; may lead to severe dependance; Accepted medical indications.
Opium, cocaine, morphine, codeine, oxycodone, methadone, secobarbital

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20
Q

Schedule III Drug

A

Less abuse potential than schedule I and II. May lead to moderate or low physical dependence or high psychological dependence; accepted medial indications
Limited opioid amounts or combined with noncontrolled substances: Vicodin, Tylenol with codeine

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21
Q

Schedule IV Drug

A

Low abuse potential compared to Schedule III; limited psychological and/ or physical dependence; accepted medical indications.

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22
Q

Schedule V

A

Low abuse potential compared to Schedule IV; may lead to limited physical or psychological dependence; accepted medical indications.
Limited amounts of opioids; often for cough or diarrhea.

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23
Q

Teratogenic Drug

A

Medication that may deform or kill the fetus.

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24
Q

FDA Pregnancy Category A

A

Adequate studies in pregnant women have not demonstrated a risk to the fetus in the fist trimester or later trimesters.

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25
Q

FDA Pregnancy Category B

A

Animal studies have not demonstrated a risk to the fetus, but there are no adequate studies in pregnant women.
OR
Adequate studies in pregnant women have not demonstrated a risk to the fetus in the first trimester and there is no risk in the last trimester, but animal studies have demonstrated adverse effects

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26
Q

FDA Pregnancy Category C

A

Animal studies have demonstrated adverse effects, but there are no adequate studies in pregnant women; however, benefits may be acceptable despite the potential risk.
OR
No adequate animal studies or adequate studies of pregnant women have been done.

27
Q

FDA Pregnancy Category D

A

Fetal risk had been demonstrated. In certain circumstances, benefits could outweigh the risks.

28
Q

FDA Pregnancy Category X

A

Fetal risk has been demonstrated. This risk outweighs any possible benefits to the mother. Avoid using in pregnant or potentially pregnant patients.

29
Q

Free Drug Availability

A

Proportion of drug available in the body to cause either desired or undesired effects.

30
Q

Active Transport

A

Requires the se of energy to move a substance.

31
Q

Passive Transport

A

Movement of substance without the use of energy.

32
Q

Carrier-mediated diffusion or Facilitated diffusion

A

Process in which carrier proteins transport large molecules across the cell membrane.

33
Q

Diffusion

A

Movement of solute in a solution from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.

34
Q

Osmosis

A

Movement of solvent in a lotion from an area of low solute concentration to an area of high solute concentration.

35
Q

Filtration

A

Movement of molecule across a membrane from an area of high pressure to an area of lower pressure.

36
Q

Ionize

A

To become electrically charged or polar- generally, ionized drugs do not absorb across the cell membranes.

37
Q

Bioavailability

A

Amount of a drug that is still active after it reaches its target tissue.

38
Q

Loading dose

A

Larger concentration of drug required to raise amount of the drug in the system up to therapeutic levels.

39
Q

Maintenance Infusion

A

Lower concentration, or slower administration rate, to keep drug at therapeutic levels.

40
Q

Blood-brain barrier

A

Tight junction of the capillary endothelial cells in the central nervous system vasculature through which only non-protein-bound, high lipid-soluble drugs can pass.

41
Q

Placental barrier

A

Biochemical barrier at the maternal/fetal interface that restricts certain molecules.

42
Q

Metabolism

A

The body’s breaking down of chemicals into different chemicals.

43
Q

Biotransformation

A

Special name given to the metabolism of drugs.

44
Q

Prodrug

A

Medication that is not active when administered, but who’s biotransformation converts it into active metabolites.

45
Q

First-pass effect

A

The Liver’s partial or complete inactivation of a drug before it reaches the systemic circulation.

46
Q

Oxidation

A

The loss of hydrogen atoms or the acceptance of an oxygen atom. This increases the positive charge (or lessens the negative charge) on the molecule.

47
Q

Hydrolysis

A

The breakage of alchemical bond by adding water, or by incorporation a hydroxyl (OH-) group into one fragment and a hydrogen ion (OH+) into the other.

48
Q

What are the four ways that drugs act?

A

Bind to receptor sites,
Change the physical properties of cells,
Chemically combine with other chemicals
Normal metabolic pathway

49
Q

Receptor

A

Specialized protein that combines with a drug, resulting in a biochemical effect.

50
Q

Affinity

A

Force of attraction between a drug and a receptor

51
Q

Efficacy

A

A drug’s ability to cause the expected response.

52
Q

Second messenger

A

Chemical that participates in complex cascading retains that eventually cause a drug’s desired effect.

53
Q

Down-regulation

A

Binding of a drug or hormone to a target cell receptor that causes true number of receptors to decrease.

54
Q

Up-Regulation

A

A drug causes the formation of more receptors than normal

55
Q

Agonist

A

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

56
Q

Antagonist

A

Dru that binds to a receptor but does not cause it to initiate the expected response.

57
Q

Agonist-antagonist (partial agonist)

A

Drug that binds to a receptor and stimulates some of its effects but block others.

58
Q

Competitive Antagonism

A

One drug bins to a receptor and causes the expected effect while also blocking another drug from triggering the same receptor.

59
Q

Noncompetitive antagonism

A

The binding of an antagonist causes a deformity of the binding site that prevents an agonist from hitting and binding.

60
Q

Irreversible Antagonism

A

A competitive antagonist permanently binds with a receptor site.

61
Q

Summation

A

Also known as an addictive effect. The drugs that both have the same effect are given together, analogous to 1+1=2.

62
Q

Synergism

A

Two drugs that both have the same effect are given together and produce a response greater than the sum of the individual responses. Analogous to 1+1=3.

63
Q

Factors Affecting Drug Response

A
Age
Body Mass
Sex
Environmental Milieu
Time of Administration
Pathologic state
Genetic Factors
Psychological Factors