Archive for the tag: Pharmacology

Pharmacology Made Easy – Drug Endings (Part 1) | Picmonic Nursing Webinar

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In part 1 of 3, Kendall Wyatt MD, RN will help you understand how using drug endings can help you master Pharmacology faster, alongside Picmonic’s research-proven learning system. Then watch Part 2 (http://bit.ly/pharmmadeeasy) to dig deep into the world of Beta Blockers, ACE-Inhibitors, calcium channel blockers and more!

Get the playlist here: http://bit.ly/easypharm1

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The staff at Reproductive Medicine Group located in Tampa, Florida have created this video about the fertility medication Menopur®. The video contains mixing instructions as well as injection instructions.

Route of Drug Administration with Selection Parameters in Simple HINDI. General Pharmacology

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Route of Drug Administration with Selection Parameters in Simple HINDI. General Pharmacology

B.Pharmacy 4th Semester- Pharmacology- Unit 01 and 02- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d44onkttxTc&list=PLtEqsPSBZlXuwf74dIoGzz6cLLkoWiEjR
B.Pharmacy 4th Semester- Pharmacology- Unit- 03- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhawgAdtgQM&list=PLtEqsPSBZlXu_UkZF1sdE341ebm7G-xsN

Route of drug administration is the medium in which any drug is introduced into the body for its action. there are several routes of administration for the drug, like oral, sublingual, buccal, topical, parenteral, transdermal, subcutaneous, intramuscular, intravenous, vaginal and rectal.

There are various routes of administration available, each of which has associated advantages and disadvantages. All the routes of drug administration need to be understood in terms of their implications for the effectiveness of the drug therapy and the patient’s experience of drug treatment.
Route of administration plays a very important role In the duration as well as the onset of action of any drug. This important factor should be in mind while considering the administration. #pushpendrapatel#solutionpharmacy

Different route of drug administrations explained in this video are-
1- oral route of drug administration
2-Buccal route of drug administration
3- Sublingual route of drug administration
4-Parenteral route of drug administration
5-Intramuscular route of drug administration
6- Intravenous route of drug administration
7- Subcutaneous route of drug administration
8- Topical route of drug administration
9- Transdermal route of drug administration
10- Rectal route of drug administration
11- Vaginal route of drug administration

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B.Pharmacy 4th Semester- Pharmacology- Unit 01 and 02- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d44onkttxTc&list=PLtEqsPSBZlXuwf74dIoGzz6cLLkoWiEjR
B.Pharmacy 4th Semester- Pharmacology- Unit- 03- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhawgAdtgQM&list=PLtEqsPSBZlXu_UkZF1sdE341ebm7G-xsN

Pharmacokinetics is currently defined as the study of the
time course of drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion. Clinical pharmacokinetics is the application of pharmacokinetic principles to the safe and effective therapeutic management of drugs in an individual patient. Pharmacokinetics influences the decided route of administration for a specific medication, the amount and frequency of each dose and its dosing intervals.

Pharmacokinetics of a drug depends on patient-related factors as well as on the drug’s chemical properties. Some patient-related factors (eg, renal function, genetic makeup, sex, age) can be used to predict the pharmacokinetic parameters in populations. For example, the half-life of some drugs, especially those that require both metabolism and excretion, may be remarkably long in the elderly

Before drugs can be clinically effective, they must be absorbed. Absorption is the process of a drug moving from its site of delivery into the bloodstream. The chemical composition of a drug, as well as the environment into which a drug is placed, work together to determine the rate and extent of drug absorption. Absorption involves several phases. First, the drug needs to be introduced via some route of administration (oral, topical-dermal, etc.) and in a specific dosage form such as a tablet, capsule, solution and so on. Drug absorption is determined by the drug’s physicochemical properties, formulation, and route of administration.

Pharmacokinetic- “What does BODY 1 do to the DRUG 2” we have simple interchanged the BODY and DRUG to make a definition. And as per the definition, our body responds to any drug by giving ADME effects.
1. A Stands for – Absorption
2. D stands for – Distribution
3. M stands for – Metabolism
4. E stands for- Elimination
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Haldol Nursing Considerations, Side Effects, and Mechanism of Action Pharmacology for Nurses

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Grab our free cheatsheet covering the 50 most commonly prescribed medications right here: http://NRSNG.com/50meds
Listen to all the episodes at: https://www.nrsng.com/medmaster-podcast/

View the blog post here: https://www.nrsng.com/haloperidol/

Haloperidol

Generic Name: haloperidol

Trade Name: Haldol

Indication: Schizophrenia, mania, aggressive and agitated patient

Action: Alters the effect of dopamine

Therapeutic Class: Antipsychotic

Pharmacologic Class: butyrophenones

Nursing Considerations
 extrapyramidal symptoms, tardive dyskinesia
 use caution in QT prolongation
 may cause seizures, constipation, dry mouth, agranulosytosis
 assess for hallucinations
 monitor hemodynamics
 monitor for neuroleptic malignant syndrome (fever, muscular rigidity, altered mental status, and autonomic dysfunction)
 monitor CBC with differential

Pharmacology: Drugs causing hemolysis in G6PD deficiency

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Here’s Shilika’s first video on Medicowesome 🙂
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Diabetes Mellitus Pharmacology Medications | NCLEX Nursing Lecture on Management Made Easy

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Diabetes mellitus NCLEX pharmacology medication review of the nursing care management for the diabetic patient. This will include the diabetic diet (carbs, fats, proteins), exercise regime (how to monitor glucose prior to exercise, types of exercises for the diabetic), and pharmacological management (oral medications for type 2 diabetes, insulin therapy for type 1 diabetes, and medications that cause hyperglycemia/hypoglycemia). In addition, I will cover the NCLEX highlights for oral medications, such as Sulfonylureas, Meglitinides, Biguanides, Alpha-glucoside inhibitors, and Thiazolidinedione, Insulin mnemonics for short-acting, rapid-acting, intermediate-acting, and long-acting insulin (which will include onset, peak, and duration times with a clever mnemonic). Don’t forget to watch PART 1 of this series on the patho, causes, types, complications, and nursing assessment of diabetes.

Quiz on DM Pharmacology & Nursing Management: http://www.registerednursern.com/diabetes-mellitus-pharmacology-nursing-management-nclex-quiz/

Part 1 of this NCLEX Diabetes Series: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ek6hnu1zaog

Lecture Notes for this video: http://www.registerednursern.com/diabetes-mellitus-nclex-review-notes-medications-nursing-management/

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Pharmacology – Diabetes Medication

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Pharmacology – DRUGS FOR DIABETES (MADE EASY)

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Topics covered include: basic pathophysiology of diabetes mellitus type 1 & type 2, hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, insulin production, pancreatic beta & alpha cells, glycogen, glucagon, glucose function. Mechanism of action of antidiabetic drugs; rapid, short, intermediate, long -acting insulin analogs, synthetic amylin, incretin mimetics, DPP-4 inhibitors, sulfonylureas, glinides, biguanides, thiazolidinediones, sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors, and alpha-glucosidase inhibitors. Drugs mentioned include insulins Lispro, Aspart, Glulisine, Regular, NPH (isophane), Detemir, Glargine, Degludec; Pramlintide; Exenatide, Liraglutide; Alogliptin, Linagliptin, Saxagliptin, Sitagliptin; Glimepiride, Glyburide, Glipizide; Nateglinide, Repaglinide; Metformin; Pioglitazone, Rosiglitazone; Canagliflozin, Dapagliflozin; Acarbose, Miglitol.
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