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Title: CLINICAL PHARMACY IN CARDIOLOGY


1
CLINICAL PHARMACY IN CARDIOLOGY
2
ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE
  • There are 35 risk factors for development of IHD
  • 3 most important ones are
  • big triple
  • hypercholesterolaemia
  • arterial hypertension
  • smoking
  • 95 of patients with IHD are observed to have
    aterosclerotic changes in coronary arteries

3
Angina, or angina pectoris, is the medical term
used to describe the temporary chest discomfort
that occurs when the heart is not getting enough
blood
  • The heart is a muscle (myocardium) and gets its
    blood supply from the coronary arteries.
  • Blood carries the oxygen and nutrients the heart
    muscle needs to keep pumping.
  • When the heart does not get enough blood, it can
    no longer function at its full capacity.
  • When physical exertion, strong emotions, extreme
    temperatures, or eating increase the demand on
    the heart, a person with angina feels temporary
    pain, pressure, fullness, or squeezing in the
    center of the chest or in the neck, shoulder,
    jaw, upper arm, or upper back. This is angina,
    especially if the discomfort is relieved by
    removing the stressor and/or taking sublingual
    (under the tongue) nitroglycerin.
  • The discomfort of angina is temporary, meaning a
    few seconds or minutes, not lasting hours or all
    day.

4
  • An episode of angina is not a heart attack.
    Having angina means the patient have an increased
    risk of having a heart attack.
  • A heart attack is when the blood supply to part
    of the heart is cut off and that part of the
    muscle dies (infarction).
  • Angina can be a helpful warning sign if it makes
    the patient seek timely medical help and avoid a
    heart attack.
  • Prolonged or unchecked angina can lead to a heart
    attack or increase the risk of having a heart
    rhythm abnormality. Either of those could lead to
    sudden death.

5
Not all chest pain is angina. Pain in the chest
can come from a number of causes, which range
from not serious to very serious
  • Chest pain can be caused by
  • acid reflux (gastroesophageal reflux disease,
    GERD),
  • upper respiratory infection,
  • asthma, or
  • sore muscles and ligaments in the chest (chest
    wall pain)
  • If chest pain is severe and/or recurrent, the
    patient should see a healthcare provider.

6
Life-threatning symptoms chest pain
  • sweating,
  • weakness,
  • faintness,
  • numbness or tingling,
  • nausea
  • Pain that does not go away after a few minutes
  • Pain that is of concern in any way

7
Angina is classified as one of the following two
types
  • Stable angina
  • People with stable angina usually have angina
    symptoms on a regular basis. The episodes occur
    in a pattern and are predictable.
  • For most people, angina symptoms occur after
    short bursts of exertion.
  • Stable angina symptoms usually last less than
    five minutes.
  • They are usually relieved by rest or medication,
    such as nitroglycerin under the tongue.

8
Unstable angina
  • Angina symptoms are unpredictable and often occur
    at rest.
  • This may indicate a worsening of stable angina,
    but sometimes the first time a person has angina
    it is already unstable.
  • The symptoms are worse in unstable angina - the
    pains are more frequent, more severe, last
    longer, occur at rest, and are not relieved by
    nitroglycerin under the tongue.
  • Unstable angina is not the same as a heart
    attack, but it warrants an immediate visit to the
    healthcare provider or a hospital emergency
    department. The patient may need to be
    hospitalized to prevent a heart attack.

9
Most cases of coronary heart disease are caused
by atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries).
  • Atherosclerosis is a condition in which a fatty
    substance/cholesterol builds up inside the blood
    vessels. These buildups are called plaques, and
    they can block blood flow through the vessels
    partially or completely.
  • Multiple risk factors
  • diabetes,
  • high blood pressure,
  • smoking,
  • high cholesterol, and
  • genetic predisposition may accelerate this build
    up.

10
Coronary Artery Spasm
  • Another cause of unstable angina is coronary
    artery spasm.
  • Spasm of the muscles surrounding the coronary
    arteries causes them to narrow or close off
    temporarily. This blocks the flow of blood to the
    heart muscle for a brief time, causing angina
    symptoms.
  • This is called variant angina or Prinzmetal
    angina.
  • This is not the same as atherosclerosis, although
    some people have both conditions.
  • The symptoms often come on at rest (or during
    sleep) and without apparent cause.
  • Cocaine use/abuse can cause significant spasm of
    the coronary arteries and lead to a heart attack.

11
Angina Pectoris Symptoms
  • Angina itself is a symptom (or set of symptoms),
    not a disease. Any of the following may signal
    angina
  • An uncomfortable pressure, fullness, squeezing,
    or pain in the center of the chest
  • It may also feel like tightness, burning, or a
    heavy weight.
  • The pain may spread to the shoulders, neck, or
    arms.
  • It may be located in the upper abdomen, back, or
    jaw.
  • The pain may be of any intensity from mild to
    severe.

12
Other symptoms may occur with an angina attack
  • Shortness of breath
  • Lightheadedness
  • Fainting
  • Anxiety or nervousness
  • Sweating or cold, sweaty skin
  • Nausea
  • Rapid or irregular heart beat
  • Pallor (pale skin)
  • Feeling of impending doom
  • These symptoms are identical to the signs of an
    impending heart attack described by the American
    Heart Association. It is not always easy to tell
    the difference between angina and a heart attack,
    except angina only lasts a few minutes and heart
    attack pain does not go away.

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14
Antianginal (coronary active) drugs
  • a group of drugs which using different
    mechanisms even out irregularities between
    myocardium need in oxygen and its blood supply
    by coronary arteries
  • clinically it is manifested by removal or
    prevention of angina attacks (improvement of
    disease current) and increasing of patients
    tolerance to physical load

15
ANTIANGINAL (CORONARY ACTIVE) DRUGS
  • ?. Nitrates and sidnonims which are close to the
    first ones
  • ??. Beta-blockers
  • ???. Calcium channel blockers (CCBs)
  • ??. Activators of potassium channels
  • Hypercholesterolemia drugs
  • Antiplatelets and anticoagulants
  • Drugs with metabolic influence on miocardium

16
NITRATES
  • nitroglycerin
  • isosorbid dinitrate
  • isosorbid-5-mononitrate

17
MECHANISM OF ACTION OF NITRATES
  • Interaction with sulfhydryl (SH-) groups
    (nitrate receptors) inside cells of vascular
    smooth muscles
  • Stimulation of formation of endothelial factor of
    relaxation of vessels (?RF) nitrogen oxide (NO)
  • Decreasing of ionized ??2 contents
  • Relaxation, dilation of vessels, including
    coronary vessels

18
MECHANISM OF ACTION OF NITRATES
  • Decreasing of tone of venules decreasing of
    preloading (income of blood into heart during
    diastole) decreasing of work of left ventricle
    and heart output
  • Decreasing of tone of arterioles decreasing of
    afterloading (decreasing of arterial pressure,
    end diastolic pressure in left ventricle and its
    volume, decreasing of tension of myocardium wall
  • decreasing of heart need in oxygen
  • improvement of blood float in ischemic zone of
    myocardium redistribution of coronary blood
    circulation with increasing of perfusion of
    subendocardial areas
  • dilation of large coronary vessels if they are
    in spasm or narrowed with aterosclerotic mass
  • development of anastomoses between arteries in
    myocardium (in case of prolonged administration)

19
NITROGLYCERINE
  • Tablets (under the tongue)
  • 1 alcohol or oil solution (under the tongue)
  • aerosol
  • Latent period - 2-3 min
  • Duration of action - 20-30 min
  • ampoules 1 solution intravenously dropply
    0,01 solution
  • prolonged forms of nitroglycerine trinitrolong,
    sustak, nitrong, ointment, plaster

20
  • Nitroglycerin is taken only when the patient
    actually has symptoms or expect to have them.
    Slow - or long-acting nitroglycerin can be used
    as a preventative treatment for angina but not
    until beta blockers are tried first.

21
NitroglycerineUnique transdermal system in a
form of plaster
22
SIDE EFFECTS OF NITROGLYCERINE
  • bursting, pulsating headache
  • decreasing of arterial pressure
  • (heartbeat, dizziness, collapse)
  • skin redness, feeling of fever

23
Contraindications for nitroglycerine use
  • Close-angled form of glaucoma
  • increasing of intracranial pressure, stroke
  • acute myocardium infarction (in case of presence
    of hypotension and collapse)

24
PROLONGED FORMS OF NITROGLYCERINE
  • Trinitrolong polymer films (0,001 g or 0,002 g
    of nitroglycerine) action develops immediately,
    lasts for 3-5 hours
  • Sustac Susta?-mite (contains 0,0026 g of
    nitroglycerine) and Sustac-forte (0,0064 g of
    nitroglycerine)
  • beginning of action after 10 min,
  • maximal action after 1 hour,
  • duration of action 4-5 hours
  • Nitrong microcapsule form of nitroglycerine of
    prolonged action
  • latent period 30-60 min,
  • maximal effect - after 3-4 hours,
  • action duration - 6-8 hours

25
Other nitrates
  • Nitrosorbid isosorbid dinitrate
  • latent period 30-50 min,
  • duration of action 4-6 hours and more
  • With sublingual administration of the drug latent
    period grows short to 3-5 min
  • buccal form (Dinitrolslrbilong)
  • tablets of prolonged action (Isoket-retard)
  • ointment
  • aerosol
  • drugs for intravenous introduction
  • Isosorbid-5-mononitrate
  • - pharmacologically active metabolite of
    isosorbid dinitrate
  • duration of action - from 6 till 24 hours

26
Iso Mak Retard 20mgIso Mak Retard 40mg Isomak
Retard 60mg(isosorbid dinitrate)
27
IsoketIsosorbid dinitrate
28
SYDNONIMINS
  • Molsidomine corvaton - sydnopharm
  • is metabolized in liver forming a substance
    SIN-1a which contains free N? group (doesnt
    need previous interaction with SH-groups)
  • nitrogen oxide stimulates guanilatecyclase that
    activates synthesis of cGMP
  • cGMP causes dilation of vessels
  • 2 mg of molsidomine 0,5 mg of nitroglycerine

29
Molsidomine
  • latent period - 20 min (5-10 min if
    administered sublingually), action duration - 6
    hours.
  • can be used for prophylaxis and releasing angina
    attacks in patients with glaucoma
    (doesnt increase intraocular pressure)
  • indicated for patients who make breaks in using
    nitrates to decrease tolerance towards them
  • doesnt lead to development of tolerance (doesnt
    need previous combining with drugs containing SH-
    groups)
  • absence of withdrawal syndrome

30
BETA-BLOCKERS
  • Using in Angina
  • blockade of b1-adrenoreceptors of heart
    decreasing of power and frequency of heart
    contractions and as follows cardiac need in
    oxygen
  • decreasing of thrombocyte aggregation and
    prevention of clotts formation
  • increasing of diastole duration improvement of
    coronary vessels saturation with blood
    improvement of perfusion of ischemic areas of
    myocardium
  • Decreasing of calcium ions accumulation
    releasing of cardiac muscle tension, improvement
    of metabolic processes, increasing of ATP
    synthesis
  • in case of acute myocardium infarction
    increasing of blood supply of ischemic areas of
    heart, decreasing of size of infarction seat,
    prevention of development of cardiac arrhythmias

31
Anaprilin ß1- ß 2 adrenoblocker
32
Vasocardin 100 mgMethoprolol tartrate
33
Nebivololbeta-blocker that also causes
vasodilation by stimulating the release of nitric
oxide
34
  • Beta blockers are taken every day, regardless of
    whether the patient is having symptoms, because
    they are proven to prevent heart attacks and
    sudden death.

35
Calcium channel blockers
  • 1. Derivatives of difenilalkilamin (verapamil)
  • 2. Derivatives of benzothiazepine (dylthiazem)
  • 3. Derivatives of dyhydropyridine (nifedipin,
    amlodipin, nimodipin)
  • Drugs of 1 and 2 groups dominantly influence on
    heart (depress automatism of sinus node,
    conductivity through conductive heart system),
    show antiarrhythmic, antianginal and hypotensive
    action.
  • Derivatives of dyhydropyridine (group of
    nifedipin) decrease blood pressure and cause
    dilation of coronary vessels, cause reflective
    tachycardia

36
Calcium channel blockers classification
37
Nifedipin - corinfar - fenigidin - adalate
  • Doesnt depress conductivity in myocardium,
  • has a weak antiarrhythmic action
  • Maximal concentration of the drug in blood
    occurs after 45-60 min after administration
    orally and after 2-3 min if administered
    sublingually
  • Effect lasts for 4-6 hours

38
Antagonists of calcium ions derivatives of
dyhydropyridine of ?? generation (amlodipin,
isradipin, nicardipin)
  • almost dont cause tachycardia
  • are indicated for prolonged treatment of patients
    with stable angina
  • arent indicated in case of non stable angina
    (long lasting latent period)
  •  

39
Indications
40
Nifedipin (??2 ions antagonist of
dyhydropyrydine series)
41
Nifedipin (
42
  • Calcium channel blockers are used primarily when
    beta blockers cannot be used and/or the patient
    is still having angina with beta blockers.
    Calcium channel blockers also lower blood
    pressure and certain ones slow heart rate.
    Calcium channel blockers have to be taken every
    day.

43
Common side effects of calcium channel blockers
include
  • headache,
  • constipation,
  • rash,
  • nausea,
  • flushing,
  • edema (fluid accumulation in tissues),
  • drowsiness,
  • low blood pressure, and
  • dizziness.
  • Sexual dysfunction, overgrowth of gums, and liver
    dysfunction also have been associated with
    calcium channel blockers. Verapamil (Covera-HS,
    Verelan PM, Calan) and diltiazem (Cardizem LA,
    Tiazac) worsen heart failure because they reduce
    the ability of the heart to contract and pump
    blood.

44
POTASSIUM-CHANNEL ACTIVATORS
  • NICORANDIL Ikorel
  • activates ??2-depending potassium channels
  • causes relaxation of smooth muscles of vessels
  • coronary, arteriolar and venous vasodilation
  • improvement of blood supply of myocardium,
    decreasing of pre- and afterloads of heart,
    decreasing of myocardial need in oxygen,
    separation of ischemic damage zone

45
Antiplatelet agents
  • Commonly prescribed include
  • Aspirin
  • Ticlopidine
  • Clopidogrel
  • Dipyridamole

46
Acetylsalicylic acid
  • 80-100 mg per day as antiplatelet drug,
    decreases risk of development of acute myocardial
    infarction and decreases mortality of patients
    with IHD
  • Helps prevent clotting in patients who have had a
    heart attack, unstable angina, ischemic strokes,
    TIA (transient ischemic attacks, or "little
    strokes") and other forms of cardiovascular
    disease.
  • Usually prescribed preventively when plaque
    buildup is evident but there is not yet a large
    obstruction in the artery.

47
Common types of cholesterol-lowering drugs
include
  • statins
  • resins
  • nicotinic acid (niacin)
  • gemfibrozil
  • clofibrate
  • Various medications can lower blood cholesterol
    levels. They may be prescribed individually or in
    combination with other drugs. They work in the
    body in different ways. Some affect the liver,
    some work in the intestines and some interrupt
    the formation of cholesterol from circulating in
    the blood. 
  • Reason for Medication
  • Used to lower LDL ("bad") cholesterol, raise HDL
    ("good") cholesterol and lower triglyceride levels

48
Choose good nutrition Reduce blood cholesterol
Lower high blood pressure Be physically active
every day Aim for a healthy weight Manage
diabetes Reduce stress Limit alcohol Stop
smoking
49
ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
  • one of the main reasons of disablement and
    mortality of people of employed age in many world
    countries, including Ukraine
  • men suffer from MI almost 5 times more often than
    women
  • Mortality of patients with MI during first two
    hours starting from the beginning of the process
    makes around 50 of all mortal cases connected
    with MI
  • the most often death causes acute
    cardiac-vascular insufficiency (angina pectoris,
    lung edema, cardiogenic shock), heart rupture,
    heavy cardiac arrhythmia
  • other complications of MI thrombosis and
    emboli, acute and chronic heart aneurisms,
    Dreslers syndrome, chronic cardiac insufficiency

50
TREATMENT OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
  • three stages
  • Immediate treatment decreasing pain and
    treatment of heart beats arrest
  • Early treatment separation of zone of
    infarction seat and prevention of early life
    threatening complications (cardiac arrhythmias,
    acute cardiac insufficiency)
  • Further treatment prevention and therapy of
    late complications of MI, prophylaxis of
    recurrent MI and death of the patients

51
TREATMENT OF ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
  • Releasing of pain and
  • cardiogenic shock prophylaxis
  • nitroglycerin (1 tablet under the tongue every
    7-10 min.)
  • Neuroleptanalgesia (fentanil with droperidol),
    morphine, omnopon, promedol (in combination with
    atropine, dimedrol, aminasine)
  • nitrous oxide in combination with neuroleptics
  • in case of remaining pain non narcotic
    analgesics in combination with antihistamine and
    neuroleptic drugs
  • to increase arterial pressure during cardiogenic
    shock intravenously dropply dopamine (drugs of
    choice), noradrenalin, mesaton
  • sometimes glucocorticosteroids are used

52
TREATMENT OF ACUTE MIOCARDIAL INFARCTION (contd)
  • Size limitation
  • of infarction seat
  • Intravenous dropply introduction of
  • 0,01 nitroglycerin solution
  • Administration of b-blockers

53
TREATMENT OF ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION (contd)
  • Treatment and prophylaxis of heart arrhythmias
  • Treatment of ventricular arrhythmias i.v.
    slowly 0,2 solution of xycain, novocainamid
    intramuscularly
  • Prophylaxis of ventricular extrasystole and
    tachycardia magnesium sulfate (intravenous
    dropping introduction of 4-5 solution),
  • ?-adrenoblockers
  • Arrhythmias of atrial origin heart glycosides,
    antagonists of calcium channels
  • Bradycardia - isadrin, atropine sulfate, alupent
    (i.v.)

54
TREATMENT OF ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION (contd)
  • CORRECTION OF BLOOD CLOTTING
  • thrombolytic drugs
  • streptokinase (1,5 mln OD), urokinase (2 mln
    OD), aktilise recombinant tissue activator of
    plasminogen (100 mg) intravenous
  • after performing of thrombolytic therapy
    intravenous introduction of heparin, at first 10
    000 OD, after 1000 OD per hour during 24-48
    hours
  • anticoagulants of indirect action
  • acetylsalicylic acid
  • (80-100-300 mg per day)

55
  • Treatment of heart insufficiency
  • i.v. furosemid (40-120 mg) i.v. dropply
    nitroglycerine (12-20 hours), morphine
  • i.v. dropply dopamin and dobutamin
  • heart glycosides in tachysystolic form of
    scintillating arrhythmia or fluttering of atria
    with moderate left-ventricular insufficiency
  • General measures
  • oxygen inhalation
  • correction of acid-base balance

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ANTIARRHYTHMIC DRUGS CLASS Mechanism
of Action Drug name IA NaChannel
blocker Disopyramide, procainamide,
quinidine IB NaChannel blocker Lidocaine,
mexiletine, tocainide IC NaChannel
blocker Flecainide, propafenone II ?
Adrenoreceptor blocker Esmolol, metoprolol,
pindolol, propranolol III KChannel
blocker Amiodarone, bretylium, sotalol IV Ca
Channel blocker Diltiazem, verapamil Other
antiarrhythmic drugs Adenosine, digoxin
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