Chapter 16 - Neuromuscular and Ganglionic Blocking Agents Flashcards

1
Q

Neuromuscular Blocking Agents - def

A

Block Nicotinic M receptors. Cause muscle relaxation.

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2
Q

Neuromuscular Blocking Agents - commonly used during…

A

surgery, endotracheal intubation, mechanical ventilation, diagnostic procedures, diagnostic procedures.

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3
Q

Ganglionic Blocking Agents - def

A

block nicotinic n receptors in autonomic ganglia.

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4
Q

Steps in Muscle Contraction - 3

A

3 - Polarization (+ outside and - inside), Depolarization (Na+ diffuses in to make inside +), Repolarization (K+ diffuses out to make inside).

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5
Q

Neuromuscular blocking agents are classified according to Mechanism of action…… 2

A

Non-depolarizing and Depolarizing.

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6
Q

neuromuscular blocking agents are also classified according to Time course of action … 4

A

Long acting, Intermediate acting, Short acting, ultra-short acting.

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7
Q

Neuromuscular Blocking Agents - Nondepolarizing Drug

A

Tubocurarine (prototype) - however, it’s not used in the USA anymore.
Doxacurium, Atracurium, Mivacurium.

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8
Q

Non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs -

A

Succinylcholine

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9
Q

Tubocurarine - causes…

A

paralysis of skeletal muscle. Also carries a plus charge.

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10
Q

Tubocurarine - mechanism of action.

A

competes with ACH for binding to nicotinic M receptors on motor end plate (does NOT mimic but block Ach) therefore no muscle contraction.

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11
Q

Therapeutic uses of Tubocurarine -

A

muscle relaxation and hypotension.

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12
Q

Tubocurarine - adverse effects.

A

Respiratory arrest, cardiovascular effects.

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13
Q

Tubocurarine - drug interactions.

A

General anesthetics can enhance action, antibiotics can intensify response (tetracycline, gentamicin) AChE inhibitors can decrease effects of tubocurarine.)

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14
Q

Tubocurarine - overdose has 3 major effects.

A

Prolonged apnea, massive histamine release, and cardiovascular collapse.

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15
Q

Tobocurarine - Dosage & Administration

A

IV administration, only by specially trained clinicians, 20 units/ml solution. repeated doses.

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16
Q

Succinylcholine -

A

only depolarizing neuromuscular blocker in clinical use. Very short acting, binds to nicotinic m receptors on motor end plate and causes depolarization.

17
Q

Time course of action for Neuromuscular blocking agents and drugs in that time.

A

Long acting - doxocurium, metocurine.
Intermediate acting - atracurium, pancuronium.
Short acting - mivacurium.
Ultra short acting - succinylcholine

18
Q

Ganglionic blocking agents - Block…

A

nicotinic n in autonomic ganglia. They lack selectivity; so that means limited application.

19
Q

Ganglionic blocking agents are used for __

A

essential hypertension (hypertension with cause unknown.)

20
Q

Side effects of ganglionic blocking agents -

A

antimuscarinic - parasympathetic blockade, hypotension - sympathetic blockade.

21
Q

Mecamylamine (inversine) - only ___ blocker available in the US.

A

ganglionic.

22
Q

Mecamylamine - what does it do?

A

interrupts impulse through ganglia of autonomic nervous system.
Stops all autonomic control of organs.
Competes with ACh for binding to nicotinic n receptors of sympathetic and parasympathetic systems.

23
Q

Mecamylamine - pharmacokinetics -

A

well absorbed following oral administration. Effect within 2 hours and lasts 12 hours. Lipid soluble, eliminated through urine.

24
Q

What’s the therapeutic use of mecamylamine?

A

For essential hypertension! (hypertension with an unknown cause.)

25
Q

Mecamylamine - adverse reactions.

A

Antimuscarinic effects - blurred vision, photophobia, etc.
Hypotension
CNS effects - tremors, convulsions, etc.