Lab Pharmaco
Lab Pharmaco
Lab Pharmaco
Remedies are methods and means to prevent, treat or cure a disease or injury. The
word comes from the latin “remedium”: “re” (again) and “mederi” (to heal). They are
classified in:
Ø Psychic remedies: hypnosis, suggestion;
Ø Physical remedies: thermotherapy, electrotherapy, radiotherapy;
Ø Chemical remedies: drugs.
A pharmaceutical drug (medication, medicine) is a chemical substance or an
association of substances with pharmacodynamic effect, used to prevent, ameliorate, cure or
diagnose a disease or symptom.
Placebo is a substance with no pharmacodynamic effect, which sometimes is effective
because of suggestion. There are two types of placebo:
Ø Pure: lactose, physiological serum;
Ø Impure: subtherapeutic doses of vitamins.
Any drug might have toxic effects, if it is administered in an inappropiate dose or condition.
“Dosis sola facit venenum” Paracelsus
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c. Toxic drugs are highly active and toxic substances, locked in the Venenum.
Their therapeutic dose, prescribed as milligrams or fractions of milligrams, is
very close to the toxic dose. They are dispensed only with a special
prescription. The label includes white letters on a black background plus a
head skull. Examples of toxic active drugs are: Atropine, Cocaine, Digoxin,
Morphine, Opium.
4. Formulation:
a. Magistral drugs are produced in small quantities, in pharmacies, according to
an individualized prescription, for a specific patient. They have a short
validity period and no preestablished formula.
b. Officinal drugs are produced in larger quantities, in pharmacies, according to
their fix formula and have a longer validity period. They have a name (e.g.
Dower powder, Bourget powder, tincture Davilla) and are dispensed
immediately in the pharmacy, with or without prescription.
c. Industrial drugs are the most common prescribed drugs (98%). They are
produced in the pharmaceutical industry, after a fix formula, in very large
quantities. Compared to magistral or officinal drugs, they have a higher
bioavailability and a longer validity period, of 1-3-5 years. The names of
industrial drugs are:
i. The chemical name is given when the drug is discovered. It describes
the atomic or molecular structure of the drug and is usually too
complex for general use. Exceptions are made in case of drugs with a
simple chemical structure, like acetylsalicylic acid or sodium
bicarbonate;
ii. The generic or official name is given after the drug is approved by the
health authority, often being a short version of the chemical name;
iii. The brand name or trademark is given by the drug company, easy to
remember, often suggesting the intended use.
5. Prescribing
a. Legend drugs – may not be dispensed by a pharmacist without a prescription
from a physician
b. Essential drugs » 200 drugs (WHO) ± prescription
c. OTC drugs (over the counter) - do not require a prescription
d. Controlled drugs - require a prescription (refills are limited)
i. Schedule I
• High abuse potential (heroin, marijuana)
• Not prescribed
ii. Schedule II
• Abuse potential and severe psychic or physical dependence
liability(opium, morphine, codeine, methadone, pentobarbital)
• No refills
iii. Schedule III
• Abuse potential < Schedules I and II (limited quantities of
narcotic analgesics)
iv. Schedule IV
• Abuse potential < Schedule III (barbital, phenobarbital,
diazepam)
v. Schedule V
• Abuse potential < Schedule IV (limited quantities of narcotics
used as antitussives or antidiarrheal drugs)
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6. Route of administration
a. Oral
b. Parenteral
c. Local (skin, mucous membrane)
7. Consistency
a. Solid
b. Semisolid
c. Liquid
d. Gaseous
DEFINITION:
Clinical trials are tests in drug development that generate safety (adverse effects) and efficacy
data for drug administration.
Before a drug is allowed to be sold on the market it takes aproximatively 12 years. Out of
5000 substances that are tested in the preclinical phase, only 5 will be tested on humans. Out
of this 5 only 1 will be found on the market. That makes a 1:5000 ratio.
The clinical trial design and objectives are written into a document - the clinical trial
protocol. It describes the scientific rationale, objectives, design, methodology, statistical
considerations, and organization of the trial.
No patient is allowed to participate to a clinical trial without signing the informed consent.
This includes information about the protocol, how the trial will work, the risks and
discomforts that they may experience.
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Phase 0
• the first in human trials
• number of patients: 10-15 (healthy volunteers)
• single subtherapeutic doses of the study drug are given
• studies the pharmacodynamics and PHARMACOKINETICS of the drug
Phase 1
• number of patients: 20-80 (healthy volunteers)
• studies the SAFETY (side effects) of the drug
• duration: 1 year
Phase 2
• number of patients: 100-300 (+ disease)
• studies the EFFICACY and safety
• usually against placebo
• duration: 2 years
Phase 3
• number of patients: 1,000 – 3,000
• studies the effectiveness, side effects and compare it to other drugs
Phase 4 (postmarketing)
• studies further side effects and the optimal use of the drug
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THE PHARMACEUTICAL DOSAGE FORMS
There are many chemicals with pharmacological properties, known as active
pharmaceutical ingredient (API), but the administration of a raw chemical is rare,
because:
• handling and accurate drug dosing can be difficult or impossible;
• administration can be impractical, unfeasible or not according to the
therapeutically aims;
• it can be degraded at the site of administration;
• it may cause local irritations or injury;
• it can have unpleasant taste or smell causing a decrease in compliance.
The pharmaceutical dosage form determines the physical form of the final
pharmaceutical preparation, made by technological processing. It must reflect
therapeutic intentions, route of administrations, dosing etc.
• liquid particles.
i. The average size of the particles < 5µm.
ii. the spacer
• Inhalation.
§ vaginal suppositories;
§ vaginal ring:
o doughnut-shaped polymeric drug delivery device;
o provides controlled release of drugs over long periods of time.
2. RECTUM:suppositories;gels, creams;enemas
THE MEDICAL PRESCRIPTION
The word "prescription" derives from "pre-", meaning "before" and "script",
meaning "writing“ or „written". It refers to the fact that the prescription is an order
that must be written down before a compound drug can be prepared or dispensed
in the pharmacy.
4. THE SIGNA which incudes the directions to the patient on how to take the
medication correctly, written always in the official language, avoiding Latin
abbreviations or symbols. It consists of:
o „D.S.“ the abbreviation from the latin „dentur signetur“, meaning
„give and label“;
o the route of administration;
o frequency: e.g. „3 x 1 tablet/day“;
o moment: e.g. „before meal“;
o period: e.g. „for 10 days“;
o any other details regarding the treatment.
CHARACTERISTICS OF A PRESCRIPTION
I. THEORETICAL PART
1. Pharmacokinetic parameters
Pharmacokinetics is the part of pharmacology that studies the drug circulation into the
body, from administration to elimination. In order to establish the optimal dose of a drug, direct
measurements or calculations of the pharmacokinetic parameters are necessary. The main
parameters are:
a. Primary pharmacokinetic parameters, which are established by direct measurement:
- The plasma concentration (Cp)
b. Secondary pharmacokinetic parameters, which are established through calculation:
- The volume of distribution (Vd)
- Bioavailability (Bd)
- The halflife (T1/2)
- The clearance (Cl)
There are certain categories of drugs in which pharmacokinetic monitoring is necessary:
- Antiepileptics: Fenitoin, Carbamazepin, Valproic acid, Lamotrigin, Etosuximid,
Fenobarbital, Primidone
- Cardioactive : Digoxin, Lidocaine
- Bronhodilating agents : Theophyline
- Antibiotics : Gentamycin, Tobramycin, Amykacin, Vancomycin
- Antivirals : Efavirenz, Tenofovir, Ritonavir
- Citostatics : Metotrexat, 5-Fluorouracil
- Imunosupressants : Ciclosporin, Tacrolimus, Sirolimus, Micofenolat
2,5 IV ADMINISTRATION
2 MAX. PLASM. c%
1 Cp 1/2
0,5
AUC
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Tmax T1/2 time (hours)
AD = Vd x Cp
AD = attack dose, Vd = volume of distribution, Cp = plasma concentration
D
Vd = ----------
Cp max
D = dose of drug administered IV, Cp max = maximum plasma concentration
In the medical practice, by calculating the Bd, we can compare 2 doses after different routes of
administration. An example: if a drug has a Bd of 25 % after oral administration, than the oral dose
will be four times higher compared to IV.
The half-life can be determined from the concentration/time graphic or through calculation,
beeing directly proportional with the volume of distribution and inversely proportional with the
clearance of the specific drug. In general, the half life is not related to the dose.
ln 2 x Vd 0,693 x Vd
T1/2 = ---------------- = ------------------
Cl Cl
Vd = volume of distribution, Cl = clearance of the drug
0,693
Cl = Ke x Vd = ---------- x Vd
T1/2
or
D
Cl = --------
AUC
Ke = elimination constant, Vd = volume of distribution, T1/2 = half-life, D = dose of administered
drug, AUC – area under the curve
The value of clearance is important for the calculation of the maintainning dose.
MD = Cp const. x Cl x t
MD – maintaining dose, Cp – plasma concentration which has to be maintained at a steady level,
Cl = clearance of the drug, t = time between administrations, in minutes
The main organs of drug elimination are the kidney and the liver. The clearance of an organ
depends on the capacity of elimination, called intrinsic clearance and on the blood perfusion of
this specific organ. Liver, renal or heart diseases can influence the clearance of an organ.
Qs x Cl int.
Cl organ = ------------------
Qs + Cl int.
Qs = blood flow through an organ, Cl int. = intrinsic clearance
DL50
TI = ----------
DE50
DL50 = medium lethal dose, DE50 = medium efficient dose
TI < 10 => the drug is very active and needs special supervision
TI > 10 => the drug needs no special precautions
2. A patient, having the bodyweight of 70 kg, is hospitalized with the following diagnosis :
pneumonia with Klebsiella pneumonie, senzitive to Tobramycin. Because of the severity
he will receive immediately Tobramycin IV, in order to obtain a therapeutic plasma
concentration of 4 mg/l. Calculate :
a. The necessary attack dose
b. The dose which has to be administered every 6 hours to maintain this concentration
100
NUMBER OF PATIENTS WHICH RESPONDED TO THE
90
80
70
TREATMENT (%)
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
DOSE OF THE DRUG (mg)
I. THEORETICAL PART
1. Pharmacokinetic parameters
Pharmacokinetics is the part of pharmacology that studies the drug circulation into the
body, from administration to elimination. In order to establish the optimal dose of a drug, direct
measurements or calculations of the pharmacokinetic parameters are necessary. The main
parameters are:
a. Primary pharmacokinetic parameters, which are established by direct measurement:
- The plasma concentration (Cp)
b. Secondary pharmacokinetic parameters, which are established through calculation:
- The volume of distribution (Vd)
- Bioavailability (Bd)
- The halflife (T1/2)
- The clearance (Cl)
There are certain categories of drugs in which pharmacokinetic monitoring is necessary:
- Antiepileptics: Fenitoin, Carbamazepin, Valproic acid, Lamotrigin, Etosuximid,
Fenobarbital, Primidone
- Cardioactive : Digoxin, Lidocaine
- Bronhodilating agents : Theophyline
- Antibiotics : Gentamycin, Tobramycin, Amykacin, Vancomycin
- Antivirals : Efavirenz, Tenofovir, Ritonavir
- Citostatics : Metotrexat, 5-Fluorouracil
- Imunosupressants : Ciclosporin, Tacrolimus, Sirolimus, Micofenolat
2,5 IV ADMINISTRATION
2 MAX. PLASM. c%
1 Cp 1/2
0,5
AUC
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Tmax T1/2 time (hours)
AD = Vd x Cp
AD = attack dose, Vd = volume of distribution, Cp = plasma concentration
D
Vd = ----------
Cp max
D = dose of drug administered IV, Cp max = maximum plasma concentration
In the medical practice, by calculating the Bd, we can compare 2 doses after different routes of
administration. An example: if a drug has a Bd of 25 % after oral administration, than the oral dose
will be four times higher compared to IV.
The half-life can be determined from the concentration/time graphic or through calculation,
beeing directly proportional with the volume of distribution and inversely proportional with the
clearance of the specific drug. In general, the half life is not related to the dose.
ln 2 x Vd 0,693 x Vd
T1/2 = ---------------- = ------------------
Cl Cl
Vd = volume of distribution, Cl = clearance of the drug
0,693
Cl = Ke x Vd = ---------- x Vd
T1/2
or
D
Cl = --------
AUC
Ke = elimination constant, Vd = volume of distribution, T1/2 = half-life, D = dose of administered
drug, AUC – area under the curve
The value of clearance is important for the calculation of the maintainning dose.
MD = Cp const. x Cl x t
MD – maintaining dose, Cp – plasma concentration which has to be maintained at a steady level,
Cl = clearance of the drug, t = time between administrations, in minutes
The main organs of drug elimination are the kidney and the liver. The clearance of an organ
depends on the capacity of elimination, called intrinsic clearance and on the blood perfusion of
this specific organ. Liver, renal or heart diseases can influence the clearance of an organ.
Qs x Cl int.
Cl organ = ------------------
Qs + Cl int.
Qs = blood flow through an organ, Cl int. = intrinsic clearance
DL50
TI = ----------
DE50
DL50 = medium lethal dose, DE50 = medium efficient dose
TI < 10 => the drug is very active and needs special supervision
TI > 10 => the drug needs no special precautions
2. A patient, having the bodyweight of 70 kg, is hospitalized with the following diagnosis :
pneumonia with Klebsiella pneumonie, senzitive to Tobramycin. Because of the severity
he will receive immediately Tobramycin IV, in order to obtain a therapeutic plasma
concentration of 4 mg/l. Calculate :
a. The necessary attack dose
b. The dose which has to be administered every 6 hours to maintain this concentration
100
NUMBER OF PATIENTS WHICH RESPONDED TO THE
90
80
70
TREATMENT (%)
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0 100 200 300 400 500 600
DOSE OF THE DRUG (mg)
ADRENERGIC DRUGS
I. THEORETICAL PART
CLASSIFICATION
Sympathomimetic drugs
§ Direct acting
o Non-selective:
§ a1 a2 β1 β2: ADRENALINE (Epinephrine)
§ a1 a2 β1: NORADRENALINE (Norepinephrine)
§ β1 β2 : ISOPRENALINE
o Selective:
§ a1 : PHENYLEPHRINE, METHOXAMINE, XYLOMETAZOLINE
§ a2 : CLONIDINE, GUANABENZ, GUANFACINE, METHYLDOPA
§ β1 : DOPAMINE, DOBUTAMINE
§ β2 : SALBUTAMOL, SALMETEROL, TERBUTALINE,
FORMOTEROL, FENOTEROL, METAPROTERENOL,
CLENBUTEROL
§ Mixed acting
o a1 a2 β1 β2, releasing agent: EPHEDRINE
§ Indirect acting
o releasing agents: AMPHETAMINE, TYRAMINE
o uptake inhibitor: COCAINE
o MAO/COMT inhibitors: PARGYLINE, ENTACAPONE
Sympatholytic drugs
§ Alpha-blockers
o Synthetic:
§ Non-selective agents (a1 and a2): PHENTOLAMINE,
PHENOXYBENZAMINE, TOLAZOLINE
§ Selective agents (a1): DOXAZOSIN, PRAZOSIN, TERAZOSIN
o Natural: ergot alkaloids: ERGOTAMINE, DIHYDROERGOTAMINE,
ERGOTOXINE, DIHYDROERGOTOXINE, ERGOMETRINE,
METHYLERGOMETRINE
§ Alpha- and beta-blockers: LABETOLOL
§ Beta-blockers
Preparations
CHOLINERGIC DRUGS
I. THEORETICAL PART
CLASSIFICATION
Parasympathomimetic drugs
§ Direct acting (stimulating the nicotinic or muscarinic receptors)
o Choline esters: ACETYLCHOLINE, CARBACHOL, METHACOLINE,
BETHANECHOL
o Natural alkaloids: PILOCARPINE, ARECOLINE, MUSCARINE, NICOTINE
§ Indirect acting
o Reversible cholinesterase inhibitors: NEOSTIGMINE, PHYSOSTIGMINE,
PYRIDOSTIGMINE, EDROPHONIUM, DONEPEZIL
o Irreversible cholinesterase inhibitors (organophosphate compounds):
ECHOTHIOPHATE, ISOFLUROPHATE, MALATHION
Cholinergic antagonists
§ Natural: ATROPINE, SCOPOLAMINE
§ Synthetic: PIRENZEPINE, HOMATROPINE, PROPANTELINE,
TRIHEXYPHENIDYL, TROPICAMIDE, BUTILSCOPOLAMINE
I. THEORETICAL PART
CLASSIFICATION
ANTICOUGHING AGENTS
Antitussives
• Opioids: OPIUM, MORPHINE, CODEINE (METHILMORPHINE), NOSCAPINE
• Non-opioids: GLAUCINE, CLOFEDANOL, OXELADINE
Expectorants
• Secretolytic expectorants (mucolytics): BROMHEXIN, AMBROXOL,
ACETYLCYSTEINE, CARBOCISTEINE
• Secretostimulant expectorants: GUAIAFENESIN
ANTIASTHMATICS
Bronchodilators
• Beta 2 adrenergic agonists:
With short action: TERBUTALINE, CLENBUTEROLE, SALBUTAMOLE, REPROTEROL,
FENOTEROLE, METAPROTERENOL
With long action: SALMETEROL, FORMOTEROL
• Cholinergic antagonists: IPRATROPIUM BROMIDE
• Musculotropes: THEOPHYLLINE, AMINOPHYLLINE
Anti-inflammators
• Corticotherapy
• Inhalatory: BECLOMETASONE, FLUTICASONE, FLUNISOLIDE,
BUDESONIDE
• Systemic corticotherapy
• Oral administration – PREDNISONE
• IV administration - HEMISUCCINATE HYDROCORTISONE
• Inhibitors of mastocitar degranulation: DISODIC CROMOGLICATE,
NEDOCROMILE, KETOTIFENE
• Antileukotrienes: MONTELUKAST SODICUM
• Lipooxygenase inhibitors: ZILEUTON
1. Antitussives are symptomatic drugs, used in dry cough, exhausting for the patient
(especially with cardiovascular problems) or to avoid local complication (irritation,
bronchiectasis, emphysema).
2. Opium and Morphine have limited use, in case the anticoughing plus analgesic and
sedative effect are desired: bronchopulmonary cancer, costal fractures, pneumothorax,
aortic aneurism, pulmonary infarction.
3. Expectorants are administered in acute and chronic bronchitis, mucoviscidosis, COPD,
rhinitis, sinusitis. They decrease the viscosity of the secretions.
4. Beta 2 adrenergic agonists are usually for inhalatory administration (rarely orally or IV).
5. Usually 2 puffs are enough in an asthma attack of medium severity.
6. Long acting beta 2 adrenergic agonists are not to be administered in crisis, because their
effect appears after 20 minutes.
7. Hemisuccinate hydrocortisone is an incompatible solution with other drugs. It should
not be mixed with other substances in the same syringe.
I. THEORETICAL PART
CLASSIFICATION
Diuretics
Sympatholytics
§ Beta-blockers:
o Non-selective agents (β1 and β2): ALPRENOLOL, PINDOLOL, CARTEOLOL,
PROPRANOLOL, NADOLOL, SOTALOL, OXPRENOLOL, TIMOLOL
o Selective agents (β1): ACEBUTOLOL, ESMOLOL, ATENOLOL,
METOPROLOL, BETAXOLOL, NEBIVOLOL, BISOPROLOL
§ Alfa-blockers: DOXAZOSIN, PRAZOSIN, TERAZOSIN
§ Alfa and beta blockers: LABETOLOL, CARVEDILOL
§ Sympathetic inhibitors with central action: METHYLDOPA, CLONIDINE,
GUANABENZ, GUANFACINE
§ Sympathetic inhibitors with peripheral action: GUANADREL, RESERPINE
1. Antihypertensive drugs are administered in low doses, which can be increased every 2-
3 weeks if nececssary, according to the blood pressure values.
2. The patient should not drink alcohol (decreases BP) or smoke (decreases the effect of
ACE inhibitors).
3. Diuretics are administered as first intention treatment in case of elderly patients with
mild to moderate hypertension. For the long term treatment a low dose of thiazide
diuretic is to be administered.
4. Loop diuretics are administered usually in emergencies. Furosemide, IV rapidly, could
determine deafness. To avoid this side effect, the rhythm of administration should be
lower than 4 mg/min.
5. During the treatment with diuretics, monitoring of plasmatic potassium, magnesium,
calcium, chloride, glycemia and uric acid concentration is necessary.
6. The most frequent side effect of thiazide diuretics is hypopotasemia. For this reason,
the association with potassium sparing diuretics is useful.
7. ACE inhibitors are the golden standard in case of heart failure and can be administered
in high risk patients with HBP (elderly, with diabetes). If dry cough appears, we can
choose an angiotensin II receptor antagonist. Direct renin inhibitors are not considered
to be first line drugs, because there are insufficient long term studies.
8. Betablockers are administered in young hypertensive patients with hyperkinetic
syndrome, ischemia or patients under treatment with direct vasodilators.
9. Betablockers have a high risk of rebound and we have to reduce the dose slowly.
10. Nonselective betablockers should not be administered in patients with bronchial asthma,
chronic bronchitis or COPD. In case of selective betablockers, selectivity will be lost
after high doses.
11. Betablockers should be avoided in diabetic patients because they mask the symptoms
of hypoglycemia.
12. Acute intoxication with betablockers are treated with Atropine IV (for bradycardia),
temporary pace-maker, Isoprenaline or alfa agonists (increase the blood pressure) and
antiseizure agents.
13. Verapamil and Diltiazem have an inotrop negative effect and should not be administered
in association with betablockers. Nifedipine produces vasodilation and should not be
associated with nitrates (hypotension and reflex tachycardia).
14. The antihypertensive drug should be choosen according to the associated pathology:
I. THEORETICAL PART
Antianginal drugs reestablish the balance between the oxygen demand and supply in
the ischemic myocardium, with decreasing the frequency of angina crisis. They act through:
• Decreasing the cardiac activity (lower intotropism, chronotropism)
• Decreasing the peripheral resistance (vasodilation)
• The association of both
Antianginal substances increase the oxygen supply and decrease the myocardial oxygen
consumption, modifying the factors that have an influence upon this consumption:
• The stress in the myocardial wall (dependent to the intraventricular pressure, ventricular
radius, wall thickness)
• Heart rate
• Contractility
CLASSIFICATION
Organic nitrates
• GLYCERYL TRINITRATE (GTN) – NITROGLYCERINE
• ISOSORBIDE DINITRATE (ISDN)
• ISOSORBIDE 5 MONONITRATE (ISMN)
• PENTAERYTHRITYL TETRANITRATE
Other antianginal drugs
• MOLSIDOMIN
• BETA BLOCKERS
• CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS
• IVABRADIN (inhibitor of the SN)
• RANOLAZINE (inhibitor of the sodium influx)
Preparations
Antiarrhythmics are drugs which depress the myocardial automatism, conductance and
excitability, administered in the prophylaxis and treatment of cardiac arrhythmias.
CLASSIFICATION
I. Sodium channel blockers
• I.A prolong repolarization: QUINIDINE, PROCAINAMIDE, DISOPYRAMIDE
• I.B shorten repolarization: LIDOCAINE, TOCAINIDE, MEXILETINE, PHENYTOIN
• I.C little effect on repolarization: FLECAINIDE, PROPAFENONE, MORICIZINE
II. Beta blockers: PROPRANOLOL, ESMOLOL, METOPROLOL, ATENOLOL
III. Potassium channel blockers : AMIODARONE, SOTALOL, BRETYLIUM
IV. Calcium channel blockers: VERAPAMIL, DILTIAZEM
V. Antiarrhythmics that work by other or unknown mechanism: ADENOSINE, DIGOXIN
1. The antiarrhtythmic should be prescribed only after the arrhythmia was proven on the
EKG/Holter and the risk is superior compared to the side effects of the drug. All
antiarrhythmics have the paradoxal proarrhythmic effect.
2. Before starting the treatment, the patient’s heart function should be evaluated, the
favouring factors for arrhythmias treated (hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia) and
arrhythmogenic drugs administration should be stopped (sympathomimetics, Miofilin,
tricyclic antidepressants).
3. The dose should be individualised, according to the EKG and the response to the
treatment.
4. Most of the antiarrhythmics have a negative inotropic effect and should not be given in
heart failure. Exceptions: Amiodarone, Lidocaine, beta blockers.
5. The pharmacological conversion to sinus rhythm in recurrent atrial fibrillation can be
made outside the hospital by administering a single dose of Propafenone or Flecainide
(„pill-in-the-pocket”).
6. In atrial fibrillation, besides the antiarrhythmic, an anticoagulant treatment should be
administered to prevent a stroke or AMI.
I. THEORETICAL PART
ANTIANEMIA AGENTS
Iron req. (mg) = Body weight (kg) x (target Hb – current Hb) x 2.4 + Iron stores (mg)
Iron stores
Children < 35 kg = 15 mg/kg
Women = 500 mg
Men = 700 – 900 mg
Normal Hb
Women = 11 - 15 g/100 ml
Men = 13 – 16 g/100 ml
ANTITHROMBOTICS
1. Write a medical prescription to a 45 year old male patient with iron defficiency anemia,
body weight of 80 kg and Hgb = 10 g/dl.
2. Calculate the necessary iron dose and specify the iron preparation and route of
administration for a 50 year old female patient with iron defficiency anemia, body
weight of 90 kg, Hgb = 8 g/dl and intolerance to oral iron therapy.
3. Write a medical prescription to a 60 year old patient with megaloblastic anemia and
gastric cancer, after total gastrectomy, in the first 2 weeks of treatment.
4. Write a medical prescription to a patient with chronic atrial fibrillation.