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PHCY220 - Module 1 Exam Study Guide

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PHCY220 - Module 1 Exam Study Guide ...

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  • September 4, 2024
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  • Exam (elaborations)
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  • PHCY220
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PHCY220 - Module 1 Exam Study
Guide

Classification of medicines (4) - Answer Prescription only

Restricted/Pharmacist only

Pharmacy only

General sale

What needs to be on a prescription? - Answer Written legibly and indelibly printed

1) Dated

2) Full name of the prescriber

3) Full street address of prescriber or postal address if they do not have a workplace

4) Prescriber's telephone number

5) Signed personally by prescriber

1) Surname, each given name, and address of patient

2) Patient DOB if under 13 years

1) Name and strength of medicine

2) Total amount of medicine to be dispensed

2a) If for injection, insertion into cavity of body, or by swallowing - dose & frequency

2b) External use - method & frequency

What must be recorded on a prescription by the pharmacy? - Answer 1) Name &
address of pharmacy

2) Date of dispensing

3) Unique identifying number or code

4) Quantity supplied

5) All prescription forms clearly record who dispensed the prescription and the
pharmacist responsible for the final check for completeness and accuracy

,Fever from infection? - Answer A response to LPS (endotoxin) also known as an
'exogenous pyrogen'

Stimulates the immune system to release soluble mediators (pyrogenic mediators,
endogenous pyrogens)

Causes fever

Evolutionary response to enhance immune function

An increase in temp of 1- 4 oC is associated with improved survival and resolution of
infection

Characteristics of bacteria - Answer they are prokaryotes

no nucleus, ds DNA genome in cytoplasm

no cellular organelles such as mitochondria & endoplasmic reticulum

cell wall****

+/- capsules, spore forming

unicellular

extra-chromosomal DNA (plasmids)

reproduce by binary fission, logarithmic growth

Characteristics of bacteria that are selective drug targets? - Answer 1) Folic Acid
synthesis

2) Bacterial cell wall

3) Outer Membrane (LPS)

4) Protein synthesis (30S & 50S)

5) Replication as a target for anti-bacterial drugs (DNA gyrase, RNA polymerase)

Characteristics of Fungi? - Answer they are eukaryotes

bigger than bacteria

have a nucleus and cellular organelles such as mitochondria & endoplasmic reticulum

unicellular - yeasts e.g. Candida or multicellular - micro-fungi (moulds) or macro-fungi
(mushrooms)

mitotic division (division time 20 hours cf 20 min)

have a cell wall

,no extra-chromosomal DNA

Characteristics of fungi that are selective drug targets? - Answer 1) Cell membrane
contains ergosterol rather than cholesterol

2) Cell wall (Glucan & chitin)

3) DNA and protein synthesis are similar (anti-metabolites: flu cytosine)

Hui Process - Answer Mihimihi

Whakawhanaungatanga

Kaupapa

Poroporoaki/whakamutanga

Innate/Intrinsic Resistance? - Answer Due to an inherent feature of the bacteria, for
example:

1) Drug target is not present

2) Drug can't cross the OM of a gram negative cell

3) The bacteria may naturally have efflux pumps which remove the drug

Acquired Resistance? - Answer 1) Drug accumulation - Decrease entry (influx),
Increased exit (efflux)

2) The target - Replace, Modification, Protection, Overproduction

3) The drug - Inactivates/breaks down the drug, Changes/modifies the drug

Common Gram +ve infections? - Answer skin (Staphylococcus); cellulitis, wound and
blood infections. Gut (Clostridium); diarrhoea, colitis. Respiratory tract (Streptococcus);
Otitis, pneumonia, meningitis

Common Gram -ve infections? - Answer Gut (E coli); GI infections, UTI. Water & soil
(Pseudomonas) various. Gut (Helicobacter); stomach ulcers. Mucosal surfaces
(Neisseria meningitidis & gonorrhoeae)

Trimethoprim MOA? - Answer - Inhibits key enzyme in folate synthesis (dihydrofolate
reductase)

- BacterioSTATIC (Gram +/-)

Trimethoprim Pharmacokinetics? - Answer Given orally (good oral bioavailability)

Fully absorbed from GI tract

High conc. in lung, kidney, CSF

, Weak base, eliminated by kidney (t1/2 =24h)

Synergism with sulphonamides

E.g. trimethoprim and sulphamethoxazole (co-trimoxazole)

Trimethoprim Unwanted effects? - Answer Nausea, vomiting

Folate deficiency

Long term use → megaloblastic anaemia

Blood disorders

Rashes

Trimethoprim Clinical uses? - Answer Never used in pregnancy (neural tube defects
associated with low folate)

Alone: Urinary tract infections (UTIs)

As co-trimoxazole: Bronchitis*, UTIs, Ear infections, Travellers diarrhoea

*if a patient can't have a penicillin

Quinolone class examples? - Answer ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, moxifloxacin
(levofloxacin section 29)

Quinolone MOA? - Answer Inhibits DNA gyrase (Gram -ve)

Inhibits topoisomerase IV (Gram +ve)

BacteriCIDAL (broad spectrum, G- > G+)

Quinolone Pharmacokinetics? - Answer Well absorbed orally

Accumulate in kidney, prostate, lung

Don't cross BBB (except ofloxacin)

Excreted mainly by the kidney moxifliox only one that doesn't require dose adjustment in
renal failure

Quinolone Unwanted Effects? - Answer Usually mild, reversible.

Most frequent GI (ciprofloxacin, c.difficile colitis)

Skin rashes

Tendon rupture (elderly + corticosteroids)

arthropathy (young patients)

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