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Pharmacology II Cardiac & Vascular

Pharmacology II Cardiac & Vascular. Kathy Plitnick RN PhD CCRN Georgia Baptist College of Nursing. Physiology of Circulation. Return of deoxygenated blood to the heart Enters the lungs to reoxygenated Ejected out of the left ventricle. Cardiac Glycosides. Positive Inotropes

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Pharmacology II Cardiac & Vascular

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  1. Pharmacology II Cardiac & Vascular Kathy Plitnick RN PhD CCRN Georgia Baptist College of Nursing

  2. Physiology of Circulation • Return of deoxygenated blood to the heart • Enters the lungs to reoxygenated • Ejected out of the left ventricle

  3. Cardiac Glycosides • Positive Inotropes • Increase contractility & CO • Improved renal perfusion • Increased GFR • Increased urine output • Slow onset of action

  4. Digoxin – Prototype • Inhibits Na/K+ pump • Calcium remains intracellular longer • Improves contractility • Lowers heart rate • Treatment for At. Fib/Flutter, PSVT • Digitalization

  5. Digoxin – Prototype • Side Effects • Bradycardia • Heart block • Toxic Effects • CNS & GI • Visual disturbances • Precipitated by low K+, Mg, & Ca+ levels • Antidote: Digibind • Therapeutic Level: 0.5-2.0 ng/ml

  6. Digoxin – Prototype • Nursing • Assess apical pulse for 60 seconds • Hold if HR < 60, Call MD • Draw blood levels 6-8 hours after dose • Monitor drug levels, electrolytes • Teach patient to take own pulse • Monitor K+, Mag & Calcium

  7. Cardiotonics • Inocor – Inamrinone • Primacor – Milrinone • Both given by continuous IV infusion • Dosages adjusted to maintain a CI > 2.0 • Heart Transplant candidates

  8. Coronary Vasodilators • Nitrates: Nitroglycerin, Isordil • Relax arterial & venous smooth muscle • Primary effect on veins • Decrease myocardial work, O2 requirements • Improves perfusion during ischemia • Arterial dilatation

  9. Nitrates • Routes • Sublingual • Oral • Ointment • Transdermal • Parenteral

  10. Nitrates • Side Effects • Headache • Hypotension • Dizziness • Palpitations • Difficulty breathing • Chest pain

  11. Nitrates • Nursing • IV infusion – frequent VS • Continuous cardiac monitoring • Maintain systolic BP > 90 mmHg • Sublingual • 3 tablets q 5 minutes • Call 911 if no relief • Continuous cardiac monitoring

  12. Antidysrhythmic Agents • Terminate/prevent abnormal cardiac rhythms • Classified according to primary effect on action potential

  13. Class I – Sodium Channel Blockers • Decrease influx of Na+ ions through fast channels during phase 0 • Prolongs absolute refractory period • Slow rate of spontaneous depolarization during phase 4 • Negative inotrope, chronotrope • Decrease myocardial O2 demand

  14. Class IA – Quinidine • Also slows phase 3 repolarization • Prolong AP duration • Increases QRS & QT • Depress contractility • Give with food • Cardiac monitoring

  15. Class IB – Lidocaine • Continuous IV for ventricular dysrhythmias • Weakens phase 4 • Decreases automaticity, AP duration • Raises V. Fib threshold • Biphasic half-life • Topical & local anesthetic • Lidocaine “crazies”

  16. Class IC – Encainide, Flecainide, Propafenone • Slow conduction through His-Purkinje • Increase both PR & QRS • Increased mortality with Encainide & Flecainide

  17. Class II – Beta Blockers • Cardioselective • Metoprolol • Atenolol • Acebutolol • Non-cardioselective • Propranolol – Prototype • Nadolol • Esmolol

  18. Class III - Amiodarone • Slow rate of phase 3 repolarization • Increase effective refractory period • Treat atrial & ventricular dysrhythmias • Has characteristics of all 4 classes • Blocks potassium channels • Vasodilatory action

  19. Amiodarone • Major Adverse Effects • Hypotension, bradycardia, AV block • Elevation of LFT’s • Proarrhythmic effect • Torsades • ARDS • Pulmonary fibrosis

  20. Amiodarone • Nursing • Baseline pulmonary, LFT’s, CXR • Monitor VS, EKG • Assess pulse for strength, rate, regularity • Monitor for side effects • Nausea, fever, decreased appetite • Blue-gray discoloration of skin • Blurred vision

  21. Amiodarone • Correct electrolyte imbalances • Check SaO2/ABG’s • Continuous cardiac monitoring • Central line for infusion

  22. Class IV – Calcium Channel Blockers • Inhibit influx of calcium during phase 2 • Primarily in sinus & AV nodes, atrial tissue • Negative inotropic, chronotropic, dromotropic effects • Increases angina threshold

  23. Verapamil (Calan) • Depresses sinus & AV node • Terminates SVT caused by AV nodal reentry • Controls ventricular rate in AFib/Flutter • Contraindicated in Sick Sinus Syndrome, advanced block, cardiogenic shock

  24. Verapamil • Nursing • Administer slow > 2 minutes • Continuous EKG monitoring • Frequency VS • Avoid concomitant use of Beta Blockers

  25. Diltiazem (Cardizem) • Fewer hypotensive side effects • Control of ventricular rate in atrial dysrhythmias • Rapid conversion of PSVT to NSR • Treatment of Angina • Initial bolus followed by continuous IV

  26. Adenosine • Treatment of PSVT & diagnostic aid • Slows impulse formation in SA node & through AV node • Depresses LV function • Half-life less than 10 seconds ! • Monitor patient very closely • Given IV bolus • Monitor EKG, apical pulse, BP, respirations

  27. Antihyperlipidemics • Definition of Hyperlipidemia • Can lipids be bad? • 3 Types of Agents Used • HMG CoA reductase inhibitors - Statins • Zocor, Mevacor, Pravachol • Block the synthesis of cholesterol in the liver • Decrease LDL, increase HDL • Fibric Acids • Lopid, Tricor • Decrease concentration of VLDL • Increase lipase – promotes VLDL catabolism

  28. Antihyperlipidemics • Bile Acid Sequestrants • Questran, Welchol, Colestid • Lower LDL levels • Bind bile acids in intestine • Major Interaction • Increase effects of anticoagulants • Do not give with grapefruit juice

  29. Antihyperlipidemics • Dietary corrections • Reduce fats, sugars & cholesterol • High fiber foods • Obtain baseline levels • Monitor GI effects • Increase water intake • Administer dose in evenings

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