Ocular Pharma #1 Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
What is the normal pH of tear film? | 7.4 |
Define Osmolarity. | Concentration of solids (solutes) in a liquid. If there is evaporation of the liquid, the osmolarity will increase because of an increase in ratio of solids to liquids. |
Define Tonicity. | Measurement of the osmotic pressure. Normal is 0.9. Above this is hypertonic, but for clinical purposes, above 1.8. |
What bacteria is a well known contaminant of eye gtts? | Pseudomonas |
What organism is a well known contaminant of homemade SCL solution? | Acanthamoeba- a protozoan |
Define Bacteriocidal. | Kills cells or inhibits their reproduction. (BAK) |
Name several causes for drugs to depredate? | Sunlight, heat, oxidation |
Which common eye drop preservative causes frequent corneal toxicity especially with overuse? | BAK- benzalkonium chloride |
Name two "disappearing" preservatives. | Purite, Sodium perborate |
How does increased viscosity help? | Makes a product thicker, prolongs contact time of the drug. |
What are the two vehicles used in eye ointments? | Lanolin and petrolatum |
What is the difference between a suspension and a solution? | A solution- the active drug is DISSOLVED in a liquid medium. Shaking not needed. A Suspension- the drug is finely divided and suspended (not dissolved) in the liquid. Requires shaking (25-30X) |
What are the downsides of eye drops? | Imprecise delivery, short contact time. |
How many times do you need to shake a solution? A suspension? | Solution- none. Suspension- 25-30X |
What parts of the eye does fluorescein stain? | Only stains corneal defects |
What parts of the eye does rose bengal stain? | Stains both corneal and conjunctival defects. |
What parts of the eye does lissamine green stain? | Stains both corneal and conjunctival defects. |
What is required for a generic drug? | Only that the bioequivalency is the same as brand drugs. |
What is not required for a generic drug and what are some differences? | Actually measuring this bioequivelancy... using different buffers, preservatives, etc, bottles and tops may be different. |
Red top (cap color) eye drops indicate what? | Cycloplegics or mydriatics |
Green top eye drop indicate what? | Miotics |
Yellow or blue top eye drops indicate what? | Beta Blocker, glaucoma drops |
Approximately what percentage of patients have poor compliance? | 30-50% |
What is anaphylaxis? | A severe, potentially life threatening whole body allergic reaction to an antigen which has PREVIOUSLY sensitized the body. Can be drugs, insect bites, food allergies, etc. |
What are the symptoms of anaphylaxis? | Onset within first 20 minutes. Difficulty breathing and swallowing due to tissue swelling, rapid, weak pulse, lower blood pressure, deep burning pain, slurred speech, anxiety, confusion, hives, itching. |
What kind of history would make you concerned that a patient may be prone to anaphylaxis? | History of hives, allergy, hay fever |
How do you treat a patient who feel faint? | Lie them down, feet elevated, head down |
What is an idiosyncratic reaction? | A severe allergic reaction, which occurs rarely and unpredictably with no history as in anaphylaxis. |
**What would an Rx look like for Mr. Barack Obama? Give him 30 of the 5 mgm Valium tablets to take by mouth as needed for anxiety, plus one at bedtime. 3 refills. No generics. | **Do this on paper |
NO STUDYSTACK ANSWER. Just a reminder. *Make sure you are familiar with the instructions and techniques for instilling eye gtts or ointment | *Reminder |
What is the advantage of an emulsion? | They require no shaking and give UNIFORM dosage with each drop. |
Can you name several other techniques or devices that prolong drug contact time? | Punctal occlusion (by hand or with punctal plugs), punctal release (Lacrisert), cotton pledgets or Weck-cel's in the cul-de-sac, collagen shilds or SCL (soaked in medications) |
Define Bacteriostatic. | Inhibits the GROWTH of the cells. (EDTA) |
Created by:
Leequa
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