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NURS472A NURSING PHARMACOLOGY: General Principles of Pharmacology; Legislation of Drugs

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Canadian Food and Drugs Act • Amended several times since inception in 1953 • Prohibits the sale of certain drugs unless approved by the federal government. • Drugs must comply with certain standards outlined in specific pharmacopeias and formularies • Physicians, nurses, & pharmacists ...

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  • January 29, 2024
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  • 2023/2024
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General Principles of Pharmacology

Legislation of Drugs:

Canadian Food and Drugs Act

• Amended several times since inception in 1953

• Prohibits the sale of certain drugs unless approved by the federal government.

• Drugs must comply with certain standards outlined in specific pharmacopeias and
formularies

• Physicians, nurses, & pharmacists depend on these standards to ensure a client receives
drugs in safe and effective dosages.

Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA)

• Replaced the Narcotic Control Act in 1997

• Provides requirements for the control and sale of narcotics, controlled drugs, and substances of
misuse

• The letter N is printed on the label of every narcotic drug.

• Controlled drugs may be legally obtained only with a prescription from a licensed medical
practitioner

Controlled Substance Schedules

5 schedules

• Based on potential misuse or harm or how easy they are to manufacture into illicit substances

Schedule I

Most dangerous drugs --- high abuse potential --- No medical use

Example: opiates ( heroin and LSD )

Schedule II

High abuse potential --- Severe dependence liability

Example: Opioids

Schedule III

Less abuse potential than schedule I and II

Example: Anabolic steroids



What is Pharmacology?

Drug

• Any chemical that affects the physiological processes of a living organism

Pharmacology

, • Broadest term for the study or science of drugs

Names of Medications

Chemical Name

• Describes the drug’s chemical composition and molecular structure

Generic Name

• Nonproprietary
• Official name
• Name assigned by the manufacturer that first developed the drug
• Name approved by Health Canada

Brand/Trade Name

• Proprietary name

• Name chosen by the drug company that sells the drug

• Registered trademark

• Names of Medications

Type of Medications:

• What is a prescription medication? An antibiotic, birth control, heart medication

• What is a non-prescription medication? Tylenol, anything over the counter

• What is a controlled medication? Morphine, hydromorphone

Pregnancy Safety Categories

• In 2014 the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) published:

• Pregnancy and Lactation Labeling Rule

• Information about using medications during pregnancy & breastfeeding

What is Pharmaceutics?

• How various dosages forms influence the way in which the drug affects the body

• Dosage forms determines the rate at which drug dissolution occurs



What is Pharmacotherapeutics?

• Focuses on clinical use of drugs to prevent disease
• Defines principles of drug actions

What is Pharmacodynamics?

• Focuses on the effects of the drug and their mechanism of action

What is Pharmacokinetics?

, • What happens to the drug from the time it enters the body until the drug & metabolites have left
the body

• Onset, peak and duration

• Based on drug’s absorption, distribution, metabolism & excretion

Absorption

• Movement of drug from its site of administration into the bloodstream for distribution to the
tissues

Bioavailability

• Extent of drug absorption

• The percentage of the administered drug dose that reaches the systemic circulation

• Based on first pass effect and the route of administration

Route of Administration

Enteral

• Oral

• Sublingual

• Buccal

• rectal

Parenteral

• Intradermal

• Subcutaneous

• Intramuscular

• Intravenous

Topical

• Ointments

• creams

• drops (ears, nose and eyes)

• Transdermal

• Inhalation

First Pass Effect

• The process in which the drug passes to the liver first

Distribution

• Transport of a drug by the bloodstream to its site of action

, • Once a drug enters the circulating blood, it is distributed throughout the body

• Drugs are distributed first to areas with extensive blood supply

• Heart, brain, kidney & liver

Factors Affecting Distribution

Rate of Perfusion

• Capillary permeability to the drug

• Blood-brain barrier is poorly permeable to water-soluble drugs.

• Some drugs have trouble getting through the CNS

• Whereas the placenta is not a selective barrier and drugs move readily through the
placenta to the fetus.

• Organs with more blood supply Receive Medication First

Albumin

• is the most common blood protein

• Carries the majority of protein-bound drug molecules

• If a given drug binds to albumin, only a limited amount of the drug is not bound

• This unbound portion is active and is considered “free” drug

Metabolism

Biotransformation

• Chemical alteration of the drug into an inactive metabolite
• In other words ---- the breakdown of a drug to an inactive form

• This allows the drug to be eliminated

Liver

• The organ most responsible for metabolism

Excretion

• Elimination of a drug from the body
• All drugs must be eliminated from the body

Kidney

• The organ most responsible for elimination

Stop and Consider

Why would your patient, who is 67 years old be ordered a lower dosage of a drug?

• An older adult is a person 65 years of age & older

• There are physiology changes with aging

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