Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference (18 page)

BOOK: Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference
5.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
acetaminophen (OTC)

(a-seat-a-mee′noe-fen)

Acephen, Apacet, APAP, Apra, Children’s Feverall, Equaline Children’s Pain Relief, Equaline Infant’s Pain Relief, Genapap, GoodSense Acetaminophen, GoodSense Children’s Pain Relief, Infantaire, Leader Children’s Pain Reliever, Mapap, Neopap, Ofirmev, Q-Pap, Q-Pap Children’s, Redutemp, Ridenol, Silapap, Tempra, T-Painol, Tylenol, Walgreen’s Non-Aspirin, XS pain reliever

Func. class.:
Nonopioid analgesic, antipyretic

Chem. class.:
Nonsalicylate, paraaminophenol derivative

ACTION:

May block pain impulses peripherally that occur in response to inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis; does not possess antiinflammatory properties; antipyretic action results from inhibition of prostaglandins in the CNS (hypothalamic heat-regulating center)

USES:

Mild to moderate pain or fever, arthralgia, dental pain, dysmenorrhea, headache, myalgia, osteoarthritis

Unlabeled uses:
Migraine

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

Hypersensitivity

Precautions:
Pregnancy (B), (C) IV; breastfeeding, geriatric patients, anemia, renal/hepatic disease, chronic alcoholism

DOSAGE AND ROUTES
Calculator

• Adult/child >12 yr: PO/RECT
325-650 mg q4-6hr prn, max 4 g/day; weight ≥50 kg IV 1000 mg q6hr or 650 mg q4hr prn, max single dose 1000 mg, min dosing interval 4 hr; weight <50 kg IV 15 mg/kg/dose q6hr or 12.5 mg/kg/dose q4hr, max single dose 15 mg/kg, min dosing interval 4 hr, max 75 mg/kg/day from all sources, ext rel 650-1300 mg q 8 hr as needed, max 4 g/day

• Child ≥2 yr and <50 kg: IV
15 mg/kg/dose q6hr or 12.5 mg/kg/dose q4hr, max single dose 15 mg/kg, min dosing interval 4 hr, max 75 mg/kg/day from all sources

• Child 1-12 yr: PO
10-15 mg/kg q4-6hr, max 5 doses/24 hr

• Child 1-12 yr: RECT
10-20 mg/kg/dose q4-6hr

• Neonate: RECT
10-15 mg/kg/dose q6-8hr

Migraine (unlabeled)

• Adult and adolescent: PO/RECT
500-1000 mg, max 1 g/dose or max 4 g/day

Available forms:
Rect supp 120, 325, 650 mg; soft chew tabs 80 mg; caps 500 mg; elix 120, 160, 325 mg/5 ml; oral disintegrating tab 80, 160 ml; oral drops 80 mg/0.8 ml, liquid 500 mg/5 ml, 160/5 ml, 1000/30 ml; ext rel 650 mg, 80 mg/ml; tabs 325, 500, 650 mg; sol for inj 1000 mg/100 ml

Administer:
PO route

• 
Crushed or whole, do not crush EXT REL product; chewable tabs may be chewed; give with full glass of water

• 
With food or milk to decrease gastric symptoms if needed

• 
Susp after shaken well; check elixir, liquid, suspension concentration carefully, susp and cups are bioequivalent

Intermittent IV INF route

• 
No further dilution needed; do not add other medications to vial or inf device

• 
For doses equal to single vial, averted IV set may be used to deliver directly from vial; for doses less than a single vial, withdraw dose and place in an empty sterile syringe, plastic IV container, or glass bottle; infuse over 15 min

• 
Discard unused portion; if seal is broken, vial penetrated, or drug transferred to another container, give within 6 hr

SIDE EFFECTS

GI:
Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain;
hepatotoxicity, hepatic seizure (overdose), GI bleeding

GU:
Renal failure (high, prolonged doses)

HEMA:
Leukopenia, neutropenia, hemolytic anemia (long-term use), thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia

INTEG:
Rash, urticaria

SYST:
Hypersensitivity

TOXICITY:
Cyanosis, anemia, neutropenia, jaundice, pancytopenia, CNS stimulation, delirium followed by vascular collapse, seizures, coma, death

PHARMACOKINETICS

85%-90% metabolized by liver, excreted by kidneys; metabolites may be toxic if overdose occurs; widely distributed; crosses placenta in low concentrations; excreted in breast milk; half-life 1-4 hr

PO:
Onset 10-30 min, peak 1/2-2 hr, duration 4-6 hr, well absorbed

RECT:
Onset slow, peak 1-2 hr, duration 4-6 hr, absorption varies

INTERACTIONS

• 
Avoid use with salicylates

• 
Renal adverse reactions: NSAIDs, salicylates

Increase:
Hypoprothrombinemia: warfarin, long-term use, high doses of acetaminophen

Increase:
hepatotoxicity—barbiturates, alcohol, carbamazepine, hydantoins, rifampin, rifabutin, isoniazid, diflunisal, zidovudine, lamotrigine, imatinib

Decrease:
absorption—colestipol, cholestyramine

Drug/Herb

Increase:
heptatotoxicity—St. John’s wort, due to acetaminophen metabolism

Increase:
hepatotoxicity—echinacea (rare)

Drug/Lab Test

Interference:
5-HIAA

Increase:
LFTs, potassium, bilirubin, LDH, pro-time

Decrease:
Hgb/Hct, WBC, RBC, platelets; albumin, magnesium, phosphate (pediatrics)

NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
Assess:

• 
Hepatic studies: AST, ALT, bilirubin, creatinine before therapy if long-term therapy is anticipated; may cause hepatic toxicity at doses >4 g/day with chronic use

• 
Renal studies: BUN, urine creatinine, occult blood, albumin, if patient is on long-term therapy; presence of blood or albumin indicates nephritis

• 
Blood studies: CBC, PT if patient is on long-term therapy

• 
I&O ratio; decreasing output may indicate renal failure (long-term therapy)

• 
For fever and pain: type of pain, location, intensity, duration

• 
Chronic poisoning:
rapid, weak pulse; dyspnea; cold, clammy extremities; report immediately to prescriber

• 
Hepatotoxicity:
dark urine; clay-colored stools; yellowing of skin, sclera; itching; abdominal pain; fever; diarrhea if patient is on long-term therapy

• 
Allergic reactions:
rash, urticaria; if these occur, product may have to be discontinued

Perform/provide:

• 
Storage of suppositories <80° F (27° C)

Evaluate:

• 
Therapeutic response: absence of pain using pain scoring; fever

Teach patient/family:

 
Not to exceed recommended dosage; the elixir, liquid, suspension come in several concentrations, read label carefully; acute poisoning with liver damage may result; tell parents of children to check products carefully; that acute toxicity includes symptoms of nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and that prescriber should be notified immediately; that toxicity may occur when used with other combination products

• 
Not to use with alcohol, herbals, OTC products without approval of prescriber

• 
May be used when breastfeeding, short-term

• 
To recognize signs of chronic overdose: bleeding, bruising, malaise, fever, sore throat

• 
That those with diabetes may notice blood glucose monitoring changes

• 
To notify prescriber of pain or fever lasting more than 3 days, not to be used in patients <2 yr unless approved by prescriber

TREATMENT OF OVERDOSE:

Product level, gastric lavage, activated charcoal; administer oral acetylcysteine to prevent hepatic damage
(
see acetylcysteine monograph
);
monitor for bleeding

Canada only   Side effects:
italics
= common;
bold
= life-threatening   
Nurse Alert

acetaZOLAMIDE (Rx)

(a-set-a-zole′a-mide)

Diamox Sequels

Func. class.:
Diuretic, carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, antiglaucoma agent, antiepileptic

Chem. class.:
Sulfonamide derivative

Do not confuse:
acetaZOLAMIDE
/
acetoHEXAMIDE

Diamox
/
Trimox/Dobutrex

ACTION:

Inhibits carbonic anhydrase activity in proximal renal tubules to decrease reabsorption of water, sodium, potassium, bicarbonate resulting in increased urine volume and alkalinization of urine; decreases carbonic anhydrase in CNS, increasing seizure threshold; able to decrease secretion of aqueous humor in eye, which lowers intraocular pressure

USES:

Open-angle glaucoma, angle-closure glaucoma (preoperatively, if sur
gery delayed), seizures (petit mal, grand mal, mixed, absence), edema in CHF, product-induced edema, acute altitude sickness

Unlabeled uses:
Urine alkalinization, metabolic alkalosis in mechanical ventilation, decrease CSF production in infants with hydrocephalus, familial periodic paralysis, nystagmus

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

Hypersensitivity to sulfonamides, severe renal/hepatic disease, electrolyte imbalances (hyponatremia, hypokalemia), hyperchloremic acidosis, Addison’s disease, long-term use for closed-angle glaucoma, adrenocortical insufficiency

Precautions:
Pregnancy (C), breastfeeding, hypercalciuria, respiratory acidosis, pulmonary obstruction/emphysema, COPD

DOSAGE AND ROUTES
Calculator
Angle-closure glaucoma

• Adult: PO/IV
250 mg q4hr or 250 mg bid for short-term therapy

Open-angle glaucoma

• Adult: PO/IV
250 mg/day in divided doses for amounts of more than 250 mg or 500 mg
EXT REL
bid, max 1 g/day

Edema in CHF

• Adult: PO/IV
250-375 mg/day or 5 mg/kg in
AM,
give for 2 days, then 1-2 days drug free

• Child: PO/IV
5 mg/kg/day or 150 mg/m
2
in
AM

Seizures

• Adult: PO/IV
8-30 mg/kg/day, in 1-4 divided doses, usual range 375-1000 mg/day;
ER
not recommended with seizures

• Child: PO/IV
8-30 mg/kg/day in divided doses tid or qid, or 300-900 mg/m
2
/day, not to exceed 1 g/day

Altitude sickness

• Adult: PO
250 mg q6-12hr;
EXT REL
500 mg q12-24hr, start therapy 24-48 hr before ascent and give for ≥48 hr after arrival at high altitude

• Geriatric:
PO
250 mg bid, use lowest effective dose

Renal dose

• Adult: PO/IV
CCr 50-80 ml/min give dose ≥6 hr reg rel of IV; CCr 10-50 ml/min give dose q12hr; CCr <10 ml/min, avoid use

Infants with hydrocephalus (unlabeled)

• Infant: PO/IV
5 mg/kg q6hr, may increase by 25 mg/kg/day; max 100 mg/kg/day

Urine alkalinization (unlabeled)

•Adult: IV
5 mg/kg/dose, repeat 2-3× over 24 hr

Familial periodic paralysis (unlabeled)

• Adult: PO
250-375 mg/day in divided doses

Metabolic alkalosis in mechanical ventilation (unlabeled)

•Adult: IV
500 mg as a single dose or 250 mg q6hr × 4 doses

Vestibular nystagmus (unlabeled)

• Adult: PO
250 mg, increase by 250 mg q3days; max 3 g/day in divided doses

Available forms:
Tabs 125, 250 mg; ext rel caps 500 mg; inj 500 mg

Administer:

• 
In
AM
to avoid interference with sleep if using product as diuretic

• 
Potassium replacement if potassium level is <3 mg/dl

PO route

• 
Do not break, crush, or chew ext rel caps; this product should be used for altitude sickness, glaucoma

• 
With food if nausea occurs; absorption may be decreased slightly

IV route

• 
After diluting 500 mg in ≥5 ml sterile water for inj;
direct IV:
give at 100-500 mg/min;
intermittent INF:
may be diluted further in LR, D
5
W, D
10
W, 0.45% NaCl, 0.9% NaCl, or Ringer’s sol and infused over 15-30 min; use within 24 hr of dilution

Additive compatibilities:
cimetidine, ranitidine

SIDE EFFECTS

CNS:
Anxiety,
confusion
,
seizures,
depression
, dizziness,
drowsiness, fatigue
, headache,
paresthesia
, stimulation

EENT:
Myopia, tinnitus

ENDO:
Hyperglycemia

GI:
Nausea, vomiting, anorexia, diarrhea
, melena,
weight loss
,
hepatic insufficiency, cholestatic jaundice, fulminant hepatic necrosis,
taste alterations
,
bleeding

GU:
Frequency, polyuria
,
uremia,
glucosuria, hematuria, dysuria, crystalluria, renal calculi

HEMA:
Aplastic anemia, hemolytic anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, purpura, pancytopenia

INTEG:
Rash
, pruritus, urticaria, fever,
Stevens-Johnson syndrome,
photosensitivity, flushing,
toxic epidermal necrolysis

META:
Hypokalemia, hyperchloremic acidosis
, hyponatremia, sulfonamide-like reactions, metabolic acidosis

PHARMACOKINETICS

65% absorbed if fasting (oral), 75% absorbed if given with food; half-life 2½-5½ hr; excreted unchanged by kidneys (80% within 24 hr), crosses placenta

PO:
Onset 1-1½ hr, peak 2-4 hr, duration 8-12 hr

PO-EXT REL:
Onset 2 hr, peak 8-12 hr, duration 18-24 hr

IV:
Onset 2 min, peak 15 min, duration 4-5 hr

INTERACTIONS

Increase:
action of—amphetamines, flecainide, memantine, phenytoin, procainamide, quinidine, anticholinergics, methenamine, mecamylamine, ePHEDrine, memantine, mexiletene, quiNIDine, folic acid antagonists

Increase:
excretion of lithium, primidone

Increase:
osteomalacia—carBAMazepine, ethotoin

Increase:
toxicity—salicylates, cycloSPORINE

Increase:
hypokalemia—corticosteroids, amphotericin B, corticotropin, ACTH

Increase:
cardiac toxicity if hypokalemia develops—arsenic trioxide, cardiac glycosides, levomethadyl

Increase:
renal stone formation, heat stroke—topiramate (avoid concurrent use)

Decrease:
primidone levels

Drug/Lab Test

Increase:
glucose, bilirubin, calcium, uric acid

Decrease:
thyroid iodine uptake

False positive:
urinary protein, 17 hydroxysteroid

NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
Assess:

• 
Edema: weight daily, I&O daily to determine fluid loss; effect of product may be decreased if used daily; monitor geriatric patients for dehydration

• 
Ocular status: intraocular pressure, ophthalmologic examination

• 
For cross-sensitivity with other sulfonamides and this product

• 
B/P lying, standing; postural hypotension may occur

• 
Electrolytes: potassium, sodium, chloride; also BUN, blood glucose, CBC, serum creatinine, blood pH, ABGs, LFTs; I&O, platelet count, patient may need to be on a high-potassium diet; identify signs of hypokalemia (vomiting, fatigue, weakness)

• 
Seizures:
neurologic status, provide seizure precaution

Perform/provide:

• 
Storage in dark, cool area; use reconstituted solution within 24 hr

Evaluate:

• 
Therapeutic response: improvement in edema of feet, legs, sacral area daily if medication is being used for CHF; decrease in aqueous humor if medication is being used for glaucoma; decreased frequency of seizures, prevention of altitude sickness

Teach patient/family:

• 
To take exactly as prescribed; if dose is missed, take as soon as remembered; do not double dose

• 
Altitude sickness: to avoid rapid ascent

• 
Diabetic: that drug may increase blood glucose and to monitor blood glucose

• 
To use sunscreen to prevent photosensitivity

• 
To avoid hazardous activities if drowsiness occurs

• 
To increase fluids to 2-3 L/day if not contraindicated

 
To report nausea, vertigo, rapid weight gain, change in stools, weakness, numbness, rash, sore throat, bleeding/bruising; Stevens-Johnson syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis (blistering, red rash that spreads)

TREATMENT OF OVERDOSE:

Lavage if taken orally; monitor electrolytes; administer dextrose in saline; monitor hydration, CV, renal status

Other books

The Mask Carver's Son by Alyson Richman
Tidewater Lover by Janet Dailey
Witch Hunter by Virginia Boecker
Ruled by the Rod by Sara Rawlings
The Easy Way Out by Stephen McCauley
Wizard (The Key to Magic) by Rhynedahll, H. Jonas