Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference (246 page)

BOOK: Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference
2.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

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

lodoxamide ophthalmic

 

loperamide (
OTC
, Rx)

(loe-per′a-mide)

Anti-Diarrheal, Equaline Anti-Diarrheal, Good Sense Anti-Diarrheal, Imodium
, Imodium A-D, Select Brand Anti-Diarrheal, Top Care Anti-Diarrheal, Walgreens Anti-Diarrheal

Func. class.:
Antidiarrheal

Chem. class.:
Piperidine derivative

Do not confuse:
Imodium
/Indocin
Loperamide
/furosemide

ACTION:

Direct action on intestinal muscles to decrease GI peristalsis; reduces volume, increases bulk; electrolytes not lost

USES:

Diarrhea (cause undetermined), travelers’ diarrhea, chronic diarrhea, to decrease amount of ileostomy discharge

Unlabeled uses:
Irinotecan-induced diarrhea, irritable bowel syndrome

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

Hyper-sensitivity, pseudomembranous colitis, constipation, dysentery, GI bleeding/obstruction/perforation, ileus, vomiting

Precautions:
Pregnancy (C), breastfeeding, children <2 yr, hepatic disease, dehydration, gastroenteritis, toxic megacolon, geriatric patients, severe ulcerative colitis

DOSAGE AND ROUTES
Calculator

• Adult:
PO
4 mg then 2 mg after each loose stool, max 16 mg/day

• Child 9-11 yr:
PO
2 mg then 1 mg after each loose stool, max 6 mg/24 hr

• Child 6-8 yr:
PO
2 mg then 0.1 mg/kg after each loose stool, max 4 mg/day

• Child 2-5 yr:
PO
1 mg then 0.1 mg/kg after each loose stool, max 4 mg/24 hr

Irinotecan-induced diarrhea (unlabeled)

• Adult:
PO
4 mg at first sign of late diarrhea (≥24 hr after irinotecan) then 2 mg q2hr × ≥12 hr; at night, 4 mg q4hr

Available forms:
Caps 2 mg; liq 1 mg/5 ml; tabs 2 mg, chew tabs 2 mg

Administer:

• 
Do not break, crush, or chew caps

• 
For 48 hr only

• 
Do not mix oral sol with other sol

SIDE EFFECTS

CNS:
Dizziness, drowsiness, fatigue

GI:
Nausea, dry mouth, vomiting, constipation
, abdominal pain, anorexia,
toxic megacolon,
bacterial enterocolitis, flatulence

INTEG:
Rash

MISC:
Hyperglycemia

SYST:
Anaphylaxis, angioedema, toxic epidermal necrolysis

PHARMACOKINETICS

PO:
Onset 1-3 hr, duration 4-5 hr, half-life 9-14 hr, metabolized in liver, excreted in feces as unchanged product, small amount in urine

INTERACTIONS

Increase:
CNS depression—alcohol, antihistamines, analgesics, opioids, sedative/hypnotics

Drug/Herb

Increase:
CNS depression—chamomile, hops, kava, valerian

NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
Assess:

• 
Stools:
volume, color, characteristics, frequency; bowel pattern before product; rebound constipation

• 
Electrolytes (potassium, sodium, chlorine) if receiving long-term therapy

• 
Skin turgor q8hr if dehydration is suspected; fluid replacement

• 
Response after 48 hr; if no response, product should be discontinued

• 
Dehydration, CNS problems in children, those with hepatic disease

• 
Abdominal distention, toxic megacolon; may occur with ulcerative colitis

Perform/provide:

• 
Storage in tight container

Evaluate:

• 
Therapeutic response: decreased diarrhea (48 hr); decreased chronic diarrhea (10 days)

Teach patient/family:

• 
To avoid OTC products unless directed by prescriber

• 
That ileostomy patient may take product for extended time

• 
If drowsiness occurs, not to operate machinery

• 
To use hard candy, sips of water for dry mouth

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

lopinavir/ritonavir

(low-pin′ah-ver/ri-toe′na-veer)

Kaletra

Func. class.:
Antiretroviral

Chem. class.:
Protease inhibitor

ACTION:

Inhibits human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) protease and prevents maturation of the infectious virus

USES:

HIV-1 in combination with or without other antiretrovirals

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

Hypersensitivity to this product or polyoxyethylated castor oil (oral solution), CYP3A4 metabolized products

Precautions:
Pregnancy (C), breastfeeding, hepatic disease, pancreatitis, diabetes, hemophilia, AV block, hypercholesterolemia, immune reconstitution syndrome, neonates, cardiomyopathy, congenital long-QT prolongation, hypokalemia, elderly patients, Grave’s disease, polymyositis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, children, HBV/HCVCO-infection

DOSAGE AND ROUTES
Calculator
HIV infection in combination with other antiretroviral agents

• Adult:
PO
400 mg lopinavir/100 mg ritonavir bid or 800 mg lopinavir/200 mg ritonavir per day may be administered to patients with <3 lopinavir resistance–associated substitutions (L10F/I/R/V, K20M/N/R, L24I, L33F, M36I, I47V, G48V, 154L/T/V, V82A/C/F/S/T, and I84V); do not give once-daily dosing with concomitant carBAMazepine, PHENobarbital, or phenytoin; do not give as once daily dosing with efavirenz, nevirapine, (fos)amprenavir, nelfinavir

• Pregnant adults:
PO
400 mg lopinavir/100 mg ritonavir bid, may need 600 mg lopinavir/150 mg ritonavir bid in the 2nd/3rd trimesters; once-daily dosing is not recommended; a preferred PI-based regimen for pregnant patients combines twice-daily lopinavir; ritonavir with zidovudine and either lamiVUDine or emtricitabine

• Adult receiving concomitant efavirenz, nelfinavir, or nevirapine:
PO TABS,
500 mg lopinavir/125 mg ritonavir bid;
CAPS/SOL
, 533 mg lopinavir/133 mg ritonavir bid

• Adolescent/child/infant >6 mo:
The once-daily regimen is not recommended in pediatric patients; capsules are not recommended for use in patients ≤40 kg; a preferred PI-based regimen for all children combines lopinavir/ritonavir with a dual NRTI; a lopinavir/ritonavir plus dual NRTI regimen is an alternative option in adolescents

Available forms:
Oral solution 400 mg lopinavir/100 mg ritonavir/5 ml; tablets 100 mg lopinavir/25 mg ritonavir, 200 mg lopinavir/50 mg ritonavir, cup 133.3/33.3 mg

Administer:
PO route

• 
TAB:
take without regard to food; swallow whole, do not crush, break, chew

• 
CAP:
must take with food

• 
ORAL SOL:
shake well, use calibrated measuring device

• 
Drug resistance testing should be done before beginning therapy in antiretroviral-naive patients and before changing therapy for treatment failure

• 
For adults and adolescents, therapy is recommended in those with a CD4 ≤500/mm
3
, who is pregnant, who has HIV-associated nephropathy, or who is being treated for hepatitis B (HBV) infection; therapy should be offered to patients at risk of transmitting HIV to sexual partners; treatment in those with a CD4 count >500/mm
3
may be considered

• 
For children, use is recommended in any symptomatic patient; for asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic children ≥5 years, therapy is recommended for those with HIV RNA ≥100,000 copies/ml or CD4 <500/mm
3
; for asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic children 1–4 yr, therapy is recommended for patients with HIV RNA ≥100,000 copies/ml or CD4 <25%

• 
For infants <12 mo, therapy is recommended regardless of clinical status, CD4 percentage, or viral load

SIDE EFFECTS

CNS:
Paresthesia, headache,
seizures,
fever, dizziness, insomnia, asthenia,
intracranial bleeding, encephalopathy

CV:
QT, PR interval prolongation, deep vein thrombosis

EENT:
Blurred vision, otitis media, tinnitus

GI:
Diarrhea, buccal mucosa ulceration, abdominal pain, nausea, taste perversion, dry mouth, vomiting, anorexia

INTEG:
Rash

MISC:
Asthenia,
angioedema, anaphylaxis, Stevens–Johnson syndrome,
increase lipids, lipodystrophy

MS:
Pain,
rhabdomyolysis,
myalgias

PHARMACOKINETICS

Well absorbed, 98% protein binding, hepatic metabolism, peak 2-4 hr, terminal half-life 6 hr

INTERACTIONS

Increase:
Toxicity—amiodarone, astemizole, azole antifungals, benzodiazepines, buPROPion, CISapride, cloZAPine, desipramine, dihydroergotamine, encainide, ergotamine, flecainide, HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, interleukins, meperidine, midazolam, pimozide, piroxicam, propafenone, propoxyphene, quiNIDine, ranolazine, saquinavir, terfenadine, triazolam, zolpidem

Increase:
QT prolongation—class 1A/III antidysrhythmics, some phenothiazines, β-agonists, local anesthetics, tricyclics, haloperidol, chloroquine, droperidol, pentamidine, CYP3A4 inhibitors (amiodarone, clarithromycin, erythromycin, telithromycin, troleandomycin), arsenic trioxide, levomethadyl, CYP3A4 substrates (methadone, pimozide, QUEtiapine, quiNIDine, risperiDONE, ziprasidone)

Increase:
Ritonavir levels—fluconazole

Increase:
Level of both products—clarithromycin, ddI

Increase:
Levels of bosentan

Decrease:
Ritonavir levels—rifamycins, nevirapine, barbiturates, phenytoin

Decrease:
Levels of anticoagulants, atovaquone, divalproex, ethinyl estradiol, lamoTRIgine, phenytoin, sulfamethoxazole, theophylline, voriconazole, zidovudine

Drug/Lab Test

Increase:
AST, ALT, CPK, cholesterol, GGT, triglycerides, uric acid

Decrease:
Hct, Hgb, RBC, neutrophils, WBC

Drug/Herb

Decrease:
Ritonavir levels—St. John’s wort; avoid concurrent use

Avoid use with red yeast rice, evening primrose oil

NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
Assess:

• 
HIV: viral load, CD4 at baseline, throughout therapy; blood glucose, plasma HIV RNA, serum cholesterol/lipid profile; resistance testing before starting therapy and after treatment failure

• 
Signs of infection, anemia

• 
Hepatic studies: ALT, AST

• 
Bowel pattern before, during treatment; if severe abdominal pain with bleeding occurs, discontinue product; monitor hydration

• 
Skin eruptions; rash

 
Rhabdomyolysis:
Muscle pain, increased CPK, weakness, swelling of affected muscles; if these occur and if confirmed by CPK, product should be discontinued

 
QT prolongation:
ECG for QT prolongation, ejection fraction; assess for chest pain, palpitations, dyspnea

 
Serious skin disorders:
Stevens–Johnson syndrome, angioedema, anaphylaxis

Evaluate:

• 
Therapeutic response: improvement in HIV symptoms; improving viral load, CD4+ T cells

Teach patient/family:

• 
To take as prescribed; if dose is missed, to take as soon as remembered up to 1 hr before next dose; not to double dose

• 
That product is not a cure for HIV; that opportunistic infections can continue to be acquired

• 
That redistribution of body fat or accumulation of body fat may occur

• 
That others can continue to contract HIV from patient

• 
To avoid OTC, prescription medications, herbs, supplements unless approved by prescriber; not to use St. John’s wort because it decreases product’s effect

• 
That regular follow-up exams and blood work will be required

Other books

Return of the Warrior by Kinley MacGregor
Coyote Horizon by STEELE, ALLEN
e Squared by Matt Beaumont
Making the Cut by David Skuy
InkintheBlood by Chandra Ryan
Old Yeller by Fred Gipson
Entangled Interaction by Cheyenne Meadows
Priceless by Shannon Mayer
Ring for the Nurse by Marjorie Moore