cardiovascular drugs by maghan das
TRANSCRIPT
Mosby items and derived items © 2007 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Cardiovascular Drugs
Maghan Das
Generic BscN Sem IV
Pharmacology
Ma’m: ShabanaMaghan Das
Mosby items and derived items © 2007 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Cardiac Glycosides
Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) Several different drugs are available to treat CHF.
The most common drug used to treat CHF is digoxin.
Digoxin increases the force and strength of contraction of the failing heart.
Adverse reactions are many and include GI, arrhythmias, neurologic, and increased salivation.
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Cardiac Glycosides
Congestive Heart Failure
Digoxin in combination with epinephrine can cause increased sympathetic activity.
Local anesthetics with a vasoconstrictor should be used with caution in people with CHF.
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Cardiac Glycosides
Managing Dental Patients Taking Digoxin
Watch for overdose side effects such as nausea, vision changes, and copious salivation.
Use epinephrine with caution to minimize arrhythmias.
Monitor pulse to check for bradycardia.
Tetracycline and erythromycin can increase digoxin levels (in ~10% of patients).
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Maghan Das
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Cardiac Glycosides
Congestive Heart Failure
Other Drugs used to Treat CHF
Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors
Angiotensin receptor blockers
Β-adrenergic blockers
Vasodilators
Diuretics
Aldosterone antagonists
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Antiarrhythmic Agents
Antiarrhythmic Agents
Arrhythmias are loosely defined as abnormal heart beats.
Antiarrhythmic agents are placed into one of four groups (I-IV).
The specific actions of these drugs are complicated. Antiarrhythmics can change the slope of
depolarization, raise the threshold for depolarization, and alter the velocity in different parts of the heart.
Antiarrhythmics have narrow therapeutic indexes and are difficult to manage.
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Antiarrhythmic Agents
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Antianginal Drugs
Angina pain can be caused by stress. Some patients find dental appointments to be
stressful and these appointments can precipitate an angina attack.
Angina occurs when the coronary arteries cannot meet the oxygen demand placed on the heart.
The basic pharmacology of antianginal drugs is to reduce the workload of the heart by decreasing cardiac output, peripheral vascular resistance or both.
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Antianginal Drugs
Nitroglycerin is a vasodilator drug that is used to prevent and treat acute attacks and as long-term therapy.
Sublingual nitroglycerin is used to treat or prevent acute attacks.
Adverse reactions include severe headache, flushing, hypotension, lightheadedness, and syncope.
Sublingual nitroglycerin can produce a localized burning or tingling in the mouth.
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Antianginal Drugs
Nitroglycerin should not be administered if the patient has taken a phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor drug such as Viagra.
The combination can cause dangerously low blood pressure.
Nitroglycerin needs to be stored in its original, amber-colored container away from light and moisture.
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Antianginal Drugs
Calcium channel blockers, β-adrenergic blockers, and ranolazine are used for long-term treatment of angina.
These drugs cannot treat an acute attack.
They cannot be used as prophylaxis.
These drugs have a longer onset of action and duration of action than sublingual nitroglycerin.
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Antianginal Drugs
Dental Implications of an Acute Angina Attack Make sure that the patient has his or her sublingual
nitroglycerin prior to starting dental treatment. Place the sublingual nitroglycerin on the treatment tray. If nitroglycerin must be administered make sure that the
patient has not used a PDE5 inhibitor within the past 24 hours.
If the patient has taken a PDE5 inhibitor call 911. If the patient has not taken a PDE5 inhibitor then have the
patient place a sublingual nitroglycerin under the tongue. A second tablet can be given in 5 minutes, followed by a
third tablet in another 5 minutes if necessary. If the patient does not respond call 911. The patient
should be taken to an emergency room.
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Antihypertensive Agents
Hypertension
Almost 50 million Americans have hypertension.
Most all of these people see a dental health practitioner on a regular basis.
It is important to check their blood pressure and pulse at each visit.
Uncontrolled hypertension is a contraindication to vasoconstrictor therapy.
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Antihypertensive Agents
Antihypertensive Agents
There are many different hypertensive drugs available.
The 5 most commonly used groups are the diuretics, β-blockers, calcium channel blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, and angiotensin receptor blockers.
The choice of antihypertensive is dependent upon the patient’s blood pressure and any compelling indications.
The different groups of antihypertensive drugs have very distinct mechanisms of action.
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Antihypertensive Agents
Antihypertensive Agents
These agents can work in the kidneys, on alpha or beta receptors, calcium receptors and within the angiotensin system.
Most antihypertensive drugs share adverse effects.
Each group has an adverse effect profile unique to them.
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Antihypertensive Agents
• Diuretics
Most diuretics can cause hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, hypercalcemia, anorexia, and hyperuricemia, hypokalemia, and hyponatremia.
Potassium-sparing diuretics can cause hyperkalemia.
• β-Adrenergic Blockers
Adverse effects include bronchospasm, sedation, reflex tachycardia, depression, masking the symptoms of hypoglycemia, and increased serum triglycerides.
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Antihypertensive Agents
• Calcium Channel Blockers
Calcium channel blockers can cause hypotension, dizziness, and lightheadedness.
They can also cause nausea, vomiting, and constipation.
Several calcium channel blockers can cause a reflex tachycardia.
Diltiazem and verapamil can cause bradycardia.
Calcium channel blockers can cause gingival enlargement as well as an altered sense of taste.
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Antihypertensive Agents
• Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE) Inhibitors
ACE inhibitors can cause hyperkalemia, dry hacking cough, angioedema, rash, and hypotension.
Same people complain of GI upset.
ACE Inhibitors can cause an altered sense of taste.
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Antihypertensive Agents
Angiotensin Receptor Blockers
Adverse effects are similar to ACE inhibitors.
α-Adrenergic Blockers
This drugs can cause significant “first-dose” orthostatic hypotension.
Other adverse effects include drowsiness, excitation, headache, tachycardia, and dizziness.
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Antihypertensive Agents
Several older antihypertensive drugs are used in patients whose blood pressure cannot be controlled with the other drugs.
These drugs include clonidine, guanethidine, reserpine, methyldopa, guanabenz and hydralazine.
These drugs cause significant dry mouth, sedation, depression, orthostatic hypotension, and tachycardia.
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Antihyperlipidemic Drugs
• It is not necessarily the drugs that are used to treat elevated cholesterol levels that are of particular concern to a dental health practitioner. Elevated cholesterol levels are as much of a concern as
the drugs used to treat them.
More often than not, people with elevated cholesterol levels have comorbid hypertension and diabetes.
All three of these disease states have a significant impact on heart health.
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Antihyperlipidemic Drugs
If a patient is taking a drug to lower cholesterol levels, the dental health practitioner should immediately check the person’s blood pressure and pulse rate. Antihyperlipidemic drugs affect cholesterol, triglycerides,
VLDL, LDL, and HDL levels to varying degrees. Antihyperlipidemic drugs work by several different
mechanisms of action. HMG Co-A reductase inhibitors inhibit HMG Co-A
reductase, which is the rate-limiting enzyme in cholesterol synthesis.
HMG Co-A reductase inhibitors have very tolerable side-effect profiles.
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Antihyperlipidemic Drugs
Ezetimibe is the newest drug available to lower cholesterol.
It works by inhibiting the intestinal absorption of cholesterol.
It is used alone or in combination with an HMG Co-A reductase inhibitor.
Niacin is a B vitamin that lowers cholesterol.
It can cause vasodilation and hypotension.
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Antihyperlipidemic Drugs
Bile-acid binding drugs prevent the absorption of cholesterol from the GI tract.
Adverse reactions include a bad taste, abdominal bloating, gas, and constipation.
Gemfibrozil is another agent used to lower cholesterol.
It causes fewer GI complaints than bile-acid binding drugs.
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Anticoagulants
Anticoagulant drugs interfere with coagulation and effect bleeding times.
This is of particular concern to the dental health practitioner.
Persons taking anticoagulant drugs can bleed for longer periods of time even as a result from planing and scaling during a simple oral hygiene visit.
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Anticoagulant Drugs
The risk for bleeding is increased depending on the dental procedure. NSAIDs and aspirin can cause bleeding, and their use should be
avoided in patients taking anticoagulant drugs.
Warfarin is the oldest oral anticoagulant drug.
It is a narrow therapeutic index drug whose blood levels must be carefully monitored.
Dose is dependent upon PT and INR times.
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Anticoagulants
Patients taking warfarin require special attention.
Always assess for any signs of bleeding.
Obtain prothrombin time (PT) or international normalized ratio (INR) and history to establish bleeding potential.
For PT or INR greater than 2 times normal, request reduction in dose.
Latent time to onset and recovery allows several days for a change in effect if the dose of warfarin changed.
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Anticoagulants
Check with physician regarding resuming dose.
Avoid aspirin and aspirin-containing compounds.
Acetaminophen and opioids are OK.
Oral hygiene with subgingival calculus removal can produce bleeding (oozing); use local pressure.
Determine underlying disease of patient.
May have atrial fibrillation.
Patient should be free of infection before scaling/root planning.
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Maghan Das
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Anticoagulants
Clopidogrel and Ticlopidine are two newer agents used for their anticoagulant effects. They are used to prevent additional heart attacks or strokes.
Both can cause significant bleeding.
Clopidogrel can cause thrombotic thrombocytopenia purpura (TTP). This can occur within 2 weeks of beginning therapy.
Ticlopidine increases bleeding after trauma or surgery.
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Anticoagulants
NSAIDs should not be given to people taking clopidogrel or ticlopidine.
Aspirin is often given in combination with clopidogrel to treat acute coronary syndrome.
Patients taking either one of these drugs should be carefully managed by their dental health practitioner.
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References
Maehle AH, Prüll CR, Halliwell RF (August 2002). "The emergence of the drug receptor theory". Nat Rev Drug Discov. 1 (8): 637–41. doi:10.1038/nrd875. PMID 12402503.
Sue Ruhoy Ilene; Daughton Christian G (2008). "Beyond the medicine cabinet: An analysis of where and why medications accumulate". Environment International. 34 (8): 1157–1169. doi:10.1016/j.envint.2008.05.002.
Maghan Das