What are some common symptoms of pulmonary TB?
Antimuscarinics MOA in asthma
Block muscarinic acetylcholine receptor which prevents ACh binding to muscarinic receptors
Results in bronchial dilation + decreased secretions
Side effects of amiodarone (class III anti-arrthymatic)
What is coarctation of the aorta?
Narrowing of a short section of the aorta
It’s rare
What do Th2 cells produce?
IL-4 which stimulates IgE
IL-5 which activates eosinophils
What does an atheroma contain?
o Macrophage cells
o Lipids
o Calcium
o Variable amount of fibrous connective tissue
What 2 types of test for TB are there?
1) Mantoux tuberculin skin test
2) Interferon gamma release assay
Blue bloaters (bronchitis)
Tissue changes in the kidney in hypertension
Types of calcium channel blockers.
All calcium channel blockers inhibit the L-type calcium channel on cells.
They are divided into 2 major categories based upon their predominant physiologic effects:
Dihydropyridines:
Non-dihydropyridines
What are arterial blood gases? When is it indicated?
Gives the:
Indicated when oxygen sats are 90-92% or lower.
Pharmacological treatment of patients with LV HF
For the rest of their life because the cumulative effect of these drugs doubles life expectancy (triple therapy).
What is the point of a granuloma?
What happens within it in TB?
What is the main disadvantage of this?
To try and contain the focus of infection.
What is wheeze?
A musical noise produced by air moving through narrowed airways (airway obstructed)
o Obstruction of airways within chest causes wheezing with expiration – airways get narrower because lungs get smaller
Contrast with stridor which occurs in inspiration – e.g. whooping cough, epiglottitis, foreign body
How is sinus bradycardia treated?
Investigate and remove cause:
Usually managed conservatively
Haemodynamic model for progression of heart failure
MOA and example of a biguanide
- Increases utilisation of glucose by increasing uptake and decreasing gluconeogenesis
List and explain the 3 factors regulating stroke volume
o Preload: the degree of stretch before contraction
o Contractility: the forcefulness of contractions
o Afterload: the pressure that must be exceeded for the ventricle to eject blood
Non-dihydropyridines calcium channel antagonists
MOA of acarbose
Inhibits intestinal alpha-glucosidases and delays absorption of starch and sucrose
What does low compliance indicate?
Stiff lung which indicates high elastic recoil.
E.g. pulmonary fibrosis
Compliance affects how much energy is required to generate pressure gradient for ventilation.
Torsades de pointes
o Commonly seen in patients with pre-existing bradycardia especially if give class I anti-arrhythmic drugs
o A feared side-effect of drugs
o Exacerbated by low potassium and magnesium
o Treatment – magnesium
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Consequences of left ventricular dysfunction?