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Pharmacology Lecture #2. Care and Handling of Medications and Solutions. Medication Identification: Medications come in a variety of packaging Glass, Metal, and Plastic Common Types of Containers in the OR: Ampule Tubes Vial Paper Preloaded syringe Foils/plastic
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Care and Handling of Medications and Solutions • Medication Identification: • Medications come in a variety of packaging • Glass, Metal, and Plastic • Common Types of Containers in the OR: Ampule Tubes Vial Paper Preloaded syringe Foils/plastic • Glass breaks and is considered a sharp for disposal purposes
Name (trade & generic) Manufacturer Strength Amount Expiration Route Lot number Handling/Storage directions Classification (if controlled substance) Read Medication Labels and Check
Identification • Name, strength, amount, and expiration should be checked three times before use (and once as it being used) • When obtained from Pyxis. • Upon entering the room. • After delivery to the sterile field and prepared for use. • As you hand the medication to the MD upon first use.
Labeling Medications • Medications are labeled according to institutional policy • Some labels come prepared sterile • Blank labels are included in sterile packs and can be written on with a sterile marker • Steri-strips can be used as labels when none are available and written on with a sterile marker • Syringes and med cups should be labeled
The Six Rights • Right Patient • Right Drug • Right Dose • Right Route • Right Time • Right Documentation (Labeling) (new as of 2007) • It is the responsibility of the circulator and surgical technologist to verify this information
MEDICATIONS • Antibiotics • Ophthalmic agents • Diagnostic Agents • Local Anesthetics • Diuretics • Drugs Affecting Coagulation
Antimicrobials and Their Action • Inhibit synthesis of cell wall • Interfere with synthesis of protein • Alter the function of cell walls • Prevent RNA or DNA production (cell replication) • Interfere with metabolism of cells
Medications Used in Surgery • Antibiotics • Are given pre-operatively, intra-operatively, and post-operatively for prevention of bacterial infection. They can be administered intravenously, intra-muscularly, orally, topically as an ointment, and in an irrigation form • In the OR the ST will handle antibiotics that will be mixed with normal saline for irrigation purposes
Antibiotics • Their action may be bacteriostatic (inhibitive of bacterial growth) or bactericidal (bacteria killing) • Are a type of antimicrobial
Types of Antibiotics • Aminoglycosides • Cephalosporin's • Macrolids • Penicillin's • Tetracycline's • Each type has a variety of antibiotics in that category
Aminoglycosides • A group of antibiotics (such as gentamicin, polymyxin) that inhibit bacterial protein synthesis and are particularly active against Gram-negative bacteria. • Often used in eye cases.
Cephalosporin's • one of several broad spectrum antibiotic substances obtained from fungi and related to penicillin (trade names Mefoxin and Keflex). • prescribed for bacterial infections of the respiratory tract, the middle ear, the bones, the skin, and the reproductive and urinary systems.
Macrolids • A group of antibiotics produced by various strains of Streptomyces. • eg, clarithromycin, azithromycin used to treat infections such as respiratory tract and soft tissue infections.
Penicillin's • obtained from Penicilliun molds • Penicillin acts by destroying the cell wall of bacteria. • may be used to treat infections such as urinary tract infections, septicemia, meningitis, intra-abdominal infection, gonorrhea, syphilis, pneumonia, etc.
Tetracycline's • derived from microorganisms of the genus Streptomyces and used broadly to treat infections. • A "broad-spectrum" antibiotic, is used to treat bacterial infections such as Rocky Mountain spotted fever, typhus fever, and tick fevers; upper respiratory infections; pneumonia; gonorrhea; amoebic infections; and urinary tract infections. • It is also used to help treat severe acne and to treat trachoma (a chronic eye infection) and conjunctivitis (pinkeye). • Tetracycline is often an alternative drug for people who are allergic to penicillin.
Ophthalmic Agents • Are multiple eye medications most given topically • ST must know what each agent does to know in what order to pass it to the surgeon • Eye Anatomy: • Conjunctiva • Anterior chamber (aqueous humor) • Iris/ciliary muscle • Posterior chamber (aqueous humor) • Pupil • Lens • Vitreous body (vitreous humor) • Retina (rods & cones) • Optic nerve
Types of Ophthalmic Agents • Enzymes • Irrigating • Viscoelastic • Miotics • Mydriatics • Ointments & Lubricants • Anti-inflammatories • Dyes • Anesthetics
Enzyme Agents • Speed up chemical reactions when mixed with anesthetic agents • Wydase (Hyaluronidase)
Irrigating Agents • Corneal moisture and operative site cleansing • BSS - Balanced salt solution – most common in our area • A-K Rinse • Blinx • Irigate • ST may need to irrigate as surgeon performs eye procedures
Viscoelastic Agents • Thick, jelly-like substance injected into anterior chamber to maintain expansion of the chamber and prevent injury to surrounding structures and tissue • May be used as vitreous substitute as well • Healon and Viscoat (Sodium Hyaluronate) • Occucoat (hydroxypropylmthylcellulose)
Miotic Agents • Constrict the pupil • Post-cataract extraction to maintain implanted lens position • Laser iridectomy • Pilocarpine
Mydriatic Agents • Paralytic agents used to dilate the pupil • Atropine • Neo-Synephrine
Ointments & Lubricants • Prevent damage to the cornea from drying during general anesthesia • Lacrilube or Duratears • Prevent eye infections post-ophthalmic surgery • Erythromycin, Neosporin, Tobramycin, Gentamycin • Combination antibiotic/anti-inflammatory • Maxitrol and Tobradex
Anti-inflammatory Agents • Steroids • Suppress inflammatory response from traumatic eye injury • NSAIDs • Decrease or minimize post-operative inflammation
Dyes • Color or mark eye tissue • Help locate abnormalities or foreign bodies • Abnormal eye cells take up staining agents • Rose bengal(commonly used in eye drops to stain damaged conjunctival and corneal cells and thereby identify damage to the eye.)
Dyes • Fluorescein sodium (Ful-Glo) (chemical dye used to identify and locate damage to the surface of the eye; useful in the management of diabetic retinopathy and macular degeneration)
Anesthetic Agents • Topical anesthesia for short ophthalmic surgical procedures • Tetracaine (Pontacaine) and Proparacaine OR • Lengthy ophthalmic procedures get a “retrobulbar” block (sensory and motor block) • Lidocaine or Bupivicaine (Marcaine) • May mix with Wydase to prolong effect or Epinephrine to vasoconstrict tissue to prolong anesthetic effect
Diagnostic Agents Includes: • Contrast media • Dyes • Staining Agents
Contrast Media • Used in radiographic diagnostic tests to enhance visualization • Most contain iodine, a radiopaque compound • Being radiopaque it illuminates tumors, stones, blockages, veins, and arteries (where ever it is injected) • Types include: Conray, Omnipaque& Hypaque • Often incorrectly referred to as dyes
Omnipaque used in vascular procedures • Hypaque is used in operative cholangeograms • Are others as well • Are light sensitive and should be stored in closed box or with something over them to protect them from light which alters the efficacy of the contrast.
Dyes • Used for marking skin as well as detecting injury in the urinary tract • Types include: Methylene blue, Indigo carmine, and Gentian violet
Methylene Blue • Is a blue dye, usually diluted with normal saline, and injected into the bladder to determine leaks in the urinary tract when pelvic surgeries are being performed • May also be injected into the fallopian tubes or uterus
Indigo Carmine • Is a blue dye given IV to verify that bladder function and kidney function are intact • Needs to be stored out of the light as it is light sensitive
Gentian Violet • A purple dye primarily used to mark incision sites • Comes in a sterile marking pen which are included in most custom packs • These are what you will use to write on the labels of your medications on your sterile field
Staining Agents • Primarily used to identify cervical tissue that is abnormal • Types include Lugol’s Solution and Acetic Acid
Staining Agents • Lugol’s solution has an iodine component that in normal tissue is absorbed by the cell, but in abnormal tissue it is not absorbed leaving the tissue white verses dark • The white tissue is identified as abnormal and biopsied
Staining Agents • Acetic Acid (vinegar) • Used as staining agent if patient is iodine sensitive or if lasers are being used • Acetic Acid makes the abnormal tissue appear whiter than normal tissue as well • With laser surgery, dark stained tissue (Lugol’s) will react less effectively with the laser
Local Anesthetics • Primarily used in short or minor operations • May be used in conjunction with general or regional anesthesia • Delivered by injection directly to the operative site • Will be prepared by the surgical technologist on the sterile field and given to the surgeon prior to incision and prn during surgery • Many surgeons also will administer local to the wound edges prior to closure to prolong the onset of post-operative pain
Local Anesthetics • Lidocaine (.5%, 1%, 1.5%, 2%) • Marcaine (Bupivicaine) .25%, .5%, .75% a. with epinephrine b. without epinephrine • Injection is with a control syringe with appropriate sized needle (27 or 25ga initial) 22ga post-incision • MUST KEEP UP WITH AMOUNTS GIVEN! CAN WRITE ON A TOWEL OR ON A GLOVE OR GOWN TAG!
Local Anesthetics • Cocaine • Nasal and eye surgery • Vasoconstrictor • and mucous membrane • anesthetic • Rule of thumb -NEVER INJECT IT.
Diuretics • Given to prevent the kidneys from reabsorbing Na+ and water • Reabsorption of these can cause a variety of patient complications including but not limited to edema (swelling), pulmonary edema (fluid in the lungs), and congestive heart failure (increased circulatory blood volume which results in the heart being overworked>enlarged heart chambers>defective heart valvular function)
Diuretics Continued • Surgical uses: • Prevent complications previously mentioned as well as reduce intraocular pressure and to reduce intracranial pressure
Types of Diuretics • Different types of diuretics have different mechanisms of action • Types include: • Loop Diuretics • Thiazide Diuretics • Potassium Sparing Diuretics • Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors • Osmotic Diuretics
Loop Diuretics • diuretics that act on the ascending loop of Henle in the kidney. • They are primarily used in medicine to treat hypertension and edema often due to congestive heart failure or renal insufficiency.
Thiazide Diuretics • They work by inhibiting reabsorption of sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl−) ions from the distal convoluted tubules in the kidneys. • Thiazides are often used to treat hypertension, although they are also used to treat congestive heart failure and symptomatic edema.
Potassium Sparing Diuretics • Potassium-sparing diuretics are commonly used to help reduce the amount of water in the body. Unlike some other diuretics, these medicines do not cause your body to lose potassium. • They are used as adjunctive therapy, together with other drugs, in the treatment of hypertension and management of congestive heart failure.
Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors • Often used for opthalmic purposes. • The drug decreases fluid formation in the eye resulting in lower intraocular pressure. • The drug forces the kidneys to excrete bicarbonate, the conjugate base of carbonic acid. By increasing the amount of bicarbonate excreted in the urine, the blood becomes more acidic. • Acidifying the blood stimulates ventilation, which increases the amount of oxygen in the blood.