Read Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference Online
Authors: Linda Skidmore-Roth
(kloe-mip′ra-meen)
Anafranil
Func. class.:
Antidepressant, tricyclic
Chem. class.:
Tertiary amine
Do not confuse:
clomiPRAMINE
/clomiPHENE/chlorproMAZINE/desipramine/Norpramin
Potentiates serotonin and norepinephrine; moderate anticholinergic effect
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
Unlabeled uses:
Panic disorder, autism, depression, premature ejaculation, dysphoria, phobias, anxiety, agoraphobia
Hypersensitivity, immediate post-MI
Precautions:
Pregnancy (C), breastfeeding, geriatric patients, seizures, cardiac disease, glaucoma, prostatic hypertrophy, urinary retention
Black Box Warning:
Children, suicidal ideation
• Adult:
PO
25 mg at bedtime, increase gradually over 4 wk to 75-250 mg/day in divided doses
• Child 10-18 yr:
PO
25 mg/day gradually increase over 2 wk; max 3 mg/kg/day or 200 mg/day, whichever is smaller
• Adult:
PO
25 mg/day, may increase to 75-100 mg/day, max 250 mg/day
• Child:
PO
25 mg/day, may increase if needed
• Adult:
PO
25-50 mg/day
• Adult:
PO
25 mg at bedtime and increase gradually over 4 wk to 75-250 mg/day in divided doses
• Child 10-18 yr:
PO
25-50 mg/day gradually increased; max 3 mg/kg/day or 200 mg/day, whichever is smaller
Available forms:
Caps 25, 50, 75 mg
•
Do not break, crush, or chew caps
•
Increased fluids, bulk in diet for constipation, especially for geriatric patients
•
Without regard to food, during initial dosing and titration give with meals
•
After titration, may be given as a single dose at bedtime to reduce daytime sedation
CNS:
Dizziness, tremors, mania
,
seizures,
aggressiveness, EPS, drowsiness, headache,
neuroleptic malignant syndrome,
insomnia, agitation
CV:
Hypotension, tachycardia,
cardiac arrest
EENT:
Blurred vision
ENDO:
Galactorrhea, hyperprolactinemia
GI:
Constipation, dry mouth, nausea, dyspepsia
, weight gain,
hepatic toxicity
GU:
Delayed ejaculation, anorgasmia
, urinary retention, decreased libido
HEMA:
Agranulocytosis, neutropenia, pancytopenia
INTEG:
Diaphoresis, photosensitivity
META:
Hyponatremia
SYST:
Suicide in children, adolescents
Onset ≥2 wk (depression), 4-10 wk (OCD); peak 2-6 hr; extensively bound to tissue and plasma proteins; demethylated in liver; active metabolites excreted in urine (50%-60%), feces (24%-32%); half-life 20-30 hr; steady state 1-2 wk
Increase:
hypertensive crisis, seizures, hypertensive episode—MAOIs
Increase:
Serotonin syndrome-SSRIs, SNRIs serotonin syndrome, linezolid, methylene blue IV
Increase:
clomiPRAMINE levels—cimetidine, FLUoxetine, fluvoxaMINE, sertraline; do not use together
Increase:
hypertensive effect—cloNIDine, EPINEPHrine, norepinephrine
Increase:
clomiPRAMINE level—CYP1A2, CYP2D6
Increase:
CNS depression—alcohol, CNS depressants, general anesthetics
Increase:
QT prolongation—other tricyclics, phenothiazines, quinolones
Decrease:
effect of cloNIDine, levodopa, skeletal muscle relaxants, haloperidol, opiates
Decrease:
clomiPRAMINE levels—barbiturates, carBAMazepine, phenytoin
Increase:
serotonin syndrome—St. John’s wort; do not use concurrently
Increase:
CNS depression—hops, kava, valerian
Increase:
prolactin, TBG, AST, ALT, blood glucose
Decrease:
serum thyroid hormone (T
3
, T
4
)
•
B/P lying, standing; pulse q4hr; if systolic B/P drops 20 mm Hg, withhold product, notify prescriber; take VS q4hr in patients with CV disease
•
Serotonin syndrome:
hyperpyrexia, rigidity, irregular pulse, diaphoresis
•
ECG
for flattening of T wave, QTc prolongation, bundle branch block, AV block, dysrhythmias in cardiac patients, may lead to cardiac collapse
•
Blood studies: CBC, leukocytes, differential, cardiac enzymes if patient is receiving long-term therapy and signs of blood dyscrasias
•
Hepatic studies: AST, ALT, bilirubin
Black Box Warning:
Mental status: mood, sensorium, affect, suicidal tendencies; increase in psychiatric symptoms: depression, panic, frequency of obsessive-compulsive behaviors; watch closely for evidence of suicidal thoughts in children, adolescents; seizure disorders
•
Urinary retention, constipation; constipation more likely in children
•
Withdrawal symptoms:
headache, nausea, vomiting, muscle pain, weakness; not usual unless product discontinued abruptly
•
Alcohol consumption; if alcohol consumed, withhold dose until
AM
•
Storage in tight container at room temp; do not freeze
•
Assistance with ambulation during beginning therapy, since drowsiness, dizziness occurs
•
Gum, hard candy, or frequent sips of water for dry mouth
•
Therapeutic response: decreased anxiety, depression
•
That the effects may take 4-6 wk to appear
•
About risk for seizures
•
To use caution when driving, performing other activities that require alertness because drowsiness, dizziness, blurred vision may occur
•
To avoid alcohol, other CNS depressants
•
Not to discontinue medication quickly
after long-term use because this may cause nausea, headache, malaise
Black Box Warning:
That suicidal thoughts/behaviors may occur in children, young adults, report immediately
•
To wear sunscreen, protective clothing to prevent photosensitivity
•
To notify prescriber if pregnancy is planned, suspected
•
That men may experience a high incidence of sexual dysfunction
•
Serotonin syndrome:
report immediately sweating, diarrhea, twitching
•
Abrupt discontinuation:
do not stop abruptly
ECG monitoring; induce emesis; lavage, activated charcoal; anticonvulsant; diazepam IV
Canada only Side effects:
italics
= common;
bold
= life-threatening
Nurse Alert
(kloe-na′zi-pam)
Klonopin
Func. class.:
Anticonvulsant
Chem. class.:
Benzodiazepine derivative
Do not confuse:
clonazePAM
/LORazepam/clorazepate/cloNIDine
KlonoPIN
/cloNIDine
Inhibits spike, wave formation during absence seizures (petit mal); decreases amplitude, frequency, duration, spread of discharge during minor motor seizures
Absence, atypical absence, akinetic, myoclonic seizures; Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, panic disorder
Unlabeled uses:
Anxiety, insomnia, nystagmus, restless leg syndrome
Pregnancy (D), hypersensitivity to benzodiazepines, acute closed-angle glaucoma, psychosis, severe hepatic disease
Precautions:
Breastfeeding, geriatric patients, open-angle glaucoma, chronic respiratory disease, renal/hepatic disease
• Adult:
PO
up to 1.5 mg/day in 3 divided doses; may be increased 0.5-1 mg q3days until desired response, max 20 mg/day
• Geriatric:
PO
0.25 daily-bid initially, increase by 0.25/day q7-14days as needed
• Child <10 yr or <30 kg:
PO
0.01-0.03 mg/kg/day in divided doses q8hr, max 0.05 mg/kg/day; may be increased 0.25-0.5 mg q3days until desired response, max 0.1-0.2 mg/kg/day
• Adult:
PO
0.25 mg bid increase to 1 m daily after 3 days, max 4 mg/day
• Adult:
PO
0.5 mg tid or 0.5 mg in the evening and 30 min before bedtime
• Adult:
PO
0.125-0.25 mg at bedtime, titrate up q3-4days as needed
Available forms:
Tabs 0.5, 1, 2 mg; orally disintegrating tabs 0.125, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2 mg
•
With food, milk for GI symptoms
•
Orally disintegrating tablets:
open pouch by peeling back foil on blister pack (do not push tab through foil), place on tongue, allow to dissolve; may be swallowed with/without water
•
Store at room temperature
CNS:
Drowsiness
, dizziness, confusion, behavioral changes, tremors, insomnia, headache,
suicidal tendencies,
slurred speech, anterograde amnesia
CV:
Palpitations, bradycardia, tachycardia
EENT:
Increased salivation, nystagmus, diplopia
, abnormal eye movements
GI:
Nausea, constipation
, polyphagia, anorexia, xerostomia, diarrhea, gastritis, sore gums
GU:
Dysuria, enuresis, nocturia, retention, libido changes
HEMA:
Thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis, eosinophilia
INTEG:
Rash, alopecia, hirsutism
RESP:
Respiratory depression,
dyspnea, congestion
PO:
Peak 1-2 hr, metabolized by liver, excreted in urine, half-life 18-50 hr, duration 6-12 hr, protein binding 85%
Increase:
clonazePAM effects—CYP3A4 inhibitors (azoles, cimetidine, clarithromycin, diltiazem, erythromycin, FLUoxetine), oral contraceptives
Increase:
CNS depression—alcohol, barbiturates, opiates, antidepressants, other anticonvulsants, general anesthetics, hypnotics, sedatives
Decrease:
clonazePAM effect—CYP3A4 inducers (carBAMazepine, PHENobarbital, phenytoin)
Increase:
CNS depression—kava, chamomile, valerian
Increase:
clonazePAM effect—ginkgo, melatonin
Decrease:
clonazePAM effect—ginseng, St. John’s wort
Increase:
AST, alk phos, bilirubin
Decrease:
Platelets, WBC
•
Seizures:
duration, type, intensity, with/without aura
•
Blood studies: RBC, Hct, Hgb, reticulocyte counts every wk for 4 wk then monthly
•
Hepatic studies: ALT, AST, bilirubin, creatinine
•
Abrupt discontinuation:
Do not discontinue abruptly, seizures may increase
•
Signs of physical withdrawal if medication suddenly discontinued
Mental status:
mood, sensorium, affect, oversedation, behavioral changes,
suicidal thoughts/behaviors;
if mental status changes, notify prescriber
•
Eye problems: need for ophthalmic exam before, during, after treatment (slit lamp, funduscopy, tonometry)
•
Allergic reaction: red, raised rash; product should be discontinued
Blood dyscrasias:
fever, sore throat, bruising, rash, jaundice
•
Toxicity:
bone marrow depression, nausea, vomiting, ataxia, diplopia, CV collapse; drug levels during initial treatment (therapeutic 20-80 ng/ml)
•
Assistance with ambulation during early part of treatment; dizziness occurs, especially among geriatric patients
•
Therapeutic response: decreased seizure activity
•
To carry emergency ID bracelet stating name, products taken, condition; prescriber’s name, phone number
•
To avoid driving, other activities that require alertness
•
To avoid alcohol, other CNS depressants; increased sedation may occur
•
Not to discontinue medication quickly after long-term use; to taper off over several wk
•
To notify prescriber of yellowing of skin/eyes, clay-colored stools, bleeding, fever, extreme fatigue, sore throat, suicidal thoughts/behaviors
•
To notify prescriber immediately if suicidal thoughts, behaviors occur
Lavage, activated charcoal, flumazenil, monitor electrolytes, VS, administer vasopressors