Prescriptive authority regulated by the state BON in each state. Tall man lettering to highlight dissimilaries with look-alike names
*Prescription
... [Show More] contains… Physicians Name, Address, and telephone number are required to be included in the prescription. DEA number (two letters, five numbers) if the prescription is for controlled substance, Patient name and DOB (also may include address and weight), Date Rx is written (expires 1 year after date issued), Name of drug and strength- avoid trailing zeroes, use leading zeroes, Directions with indications/route of administration and frequency, write out number of refills, quantity of drug, signature, NPI number (9 or 11 numbers), sign as A-PNP or role recognized by the BON
Drug schedules – one is most addictive, up to schedule 5.
1) heroin, LSD, marijuana.
2) oxycodone, hydrocodone, methamphetamines.
3) codeine, ketamine, testosterone.
4) Xanax, valium, ambien, tramadol.
5) antidiarrheal, antitussives, Lomotil, lyrica.
*calculation question
Pharmacology Principles: 3 questions
Pharmacodynamics – effect of drugs on body. Works by receptors. Usually proteins that interact with drugs.
Agonist – produce receptor stimulation, conformational change every time they bind.
Partial agonist – properties between agonists and antagonists. Submaximal effect. Stimulate only some of the receptors.
Antagonist – affinity for receptor but NO intrinsic activity. Affinity allows antagonist to bind to receptors, but lack of intrinsic activity prevents receptor activation. Blocks action of drugs (example Narcan).
Therapeutic range – between minimum effective concentration and toxic concentration. Working effectivity with no toxicity or adverse effects. Wider therapeutic range is better! Easiest to control.
Bioavailability – percentage of dose of drug that survives first pass through liver and reaches blood stream.
Half life – time required for amount of drug to decline by 50%. Shorter half life admin more frequently. 4.5-5 half lives to get to steady state and to eliminate from body.
Pharmacokinetics – what body does to drug. Absorption, distribution, metabolism, elimination. (ADME) Parenteral (bypass first pass), then oral, then lungs, then skin, eye and ears for best absorption.
Distribution affected by lipid/water solubility, PH, protein binding, size of molecule.
Protein binding – unbound drug is free drug which is active. When 2 highly bound drugs are given it increases the level of one of the drugs, leading to toxicity. IE warfarin and phenytoin are both highly protein bound. Low plasma protein result in mor.............................................continued [Show Less]