Name the enzyme inhibitors (SICKFACES.COM)
Sodium valproate Isoniazid / itraconazole Cimetidine Ketoconazole Fluconazole / fluoxetine Alcohol (acute, binge) / Amiodarone Chloramphenicol Erythromycin + clarithromycin Sulphonamides (co-trimoxazole) Ciprofloxacin Omeprazole Metronidazole
Also:
Grapefruit juice
Name the enzyme inducers (SCRAP GPSS)
Sulphonylureas Carbamazepine Rifampicin Alcohol (chronic) Phenytoin
Griseofulvin
Phenobarbital
St John’s Wort
Smoking
What are the main interactions with amiodarone?
Amiodarone has a very long half life so there is potential for drug interactions to occur weeks/months after stopping treatment
What are the common interactions with digoxin?
What are the common interactions with lithium?
What are the common interactions with methotrexate?
What are the common interactions with phenytoin?
What are the common interactions with theophylline?
What are the common interactions with warfarin?
What is the risk of consuming tyramine based food and drink e.g. cheese if on MAOIs?
Hypertensive crisis
How does alcohol interact with TCAs and mirtazapine?
Increased sedative effect
What are the main interactions with combined oral contraceptives?
What are the main interactions with progesterone only contraceptives?
Efficacy reduced by enzyme inducers
Additional protection is needed for duration of treatment and 4 weeks after
What are the main interactions with sympathomimetics e.g. pseudoephedrine?
- Beta blockers- hypertension risk
What are the main interactions with Orlistat?
What is a pharmacokinetic interaction?
These occur when one drug alters the absorption, distribution, metabolism, or
excretion of another drug, thus increasing or reducing the amount of drug available
to produce its pharmacological effects.
What is a pharmacodynamic interaction?
This is where effects of one drug are changed by the presence of another drug at its
pharmacological site of action.
e.g. electrolyte imbalance, combined toxicity, antagonising effects
What PPI does clopidogrel interact with and what would be an alternative?
Omeprazole and esomeprazole
Lansoprazole would be an alternative
What drug can cause blue vision and which drug can cause yellow vision in overdose
Blue vision can be cause by slidenafil and yellow vision is a sign of digoxin toxicity alongside nausea and vomiting
Which SGLT is not licensed to be used with pioglitazone for triple therapy
Dapagflozin
What is drug interaction?
the modifications of effects of one drug by another drug (poly-pharmacy)
What is drug interaction? Pharmacodynamics (PD)
(“what the drug does to the body”)
related to the pharmacological activity of the interacting drugs leading to either:
synergistic effect, 1+1 > 2
or antagonistic effect, 1+1 < 2
What is drug interaction? Pharmacokinetic (PK)
(“what the body does to the drug”) related to the effect of a drug on another on physical disposition of the drug, i.e. movement of drug thru the body absorption distribution metabolism elimination
Effects of drug interaction
Increased effect: Additive or Synergistic
effect
BAD - Increased toxic effect GOOD - Increased therapeutic effect to produce synergistic therapeutic effects e.g. several antibiotic combinations Penicillin-Streptomycin