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Week 8 seminar Urinary System Disorders and Calculating ‘Desired-Doses’ (chapter-28 and chapter-9) The Urinary System Made up of Organs which form & excrete urine (see Fig.28-1 on pg 585) (2) Kidneys (2) Ureters Bladder Urethra Common symptoms of Urinary System Disorders Anorexia, Nausea, Vomiting Fatigue, Lethargy, Malaise Dysuria, urgency, frequency, hematuria Pain in lower-back (kidney area), flank (sides) Fever, disorientation Common Side-effects of Rx’s for Urinary System Disorders Drying of secretions Drowsiness, dizziness, sedation Rash, hives, ‘urticaria’ GI effects (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea) Headache Discoloration of urine (see Table 28-1, p.585) UrinarySystem DRUG therapy See Chart @ top of page-584 in Textbook Diuretics – modify kidney function Electrolytes/Fluids (“replacement therapy”) (see Table 28-2 on page-586) … examples … Sodium Potassium Calcium Magnesium … more detail, next slide Electrolyte imbalance effects Electrolyte level symptoms SODIUM high Edema, thirst, high temp, flushing low Stomach-cramps, vomiting, diarrhea high Abdominal-distension, diarrhea low Paralysis, weakness, muscle function high Anorexia, nausea, coma, weakness low Muscle-cramp/twitching, numbness/tingling of fingers, toes, lips high Flushing, sweating, low temp, cardiac depression low Abnormal heart rhythms, neurotoxicity POTASSIUM CALCIUM MAGNESIUM Urinary Tract Infections (UTI) Most common bacterial infection in the U.S. 10 – 20% of females have a UTI during lifetime E.Coli causes ~90% of all cultured UTI’s Upper UTI (kidneys/ureters) - symptoms include> *lower-back/flank pain *fever *headache *nausea/vomiting Lower UTI (bladder/urethra) - symptoms include> *frequency *urgency *dysuria *hematuria *oliguria *incontinence Some causes of UTI’s Anything that results in urine being ‘held’ in the bladder (more common in females …sorry ladies!) If you gotta go … you BETTER go! Dietary factors – certain foods (see Box 28-1 p587) Enlarged Prostate (males) – constricts the urethra, causing urine to be ‘retained’ in the bladder Female ‘Plumbing’ – due to the short length of urethra, and the proximity of the urethra, vagina, and the anus UTI - Drug Therapy Anti-Bacterials (sulfa-drugs, trimethoprim) kill bacteria, in the urine and systemically Anti-septics (Macrobid, methenamine) antibiotic activity ONLY in the urine ! Analgesics (Pyridium, AZO-standard otc) by topical and local anesthesia on the lining of the urinary-tract --- Study --- Table 28-3 on page 589 UTI – RX patient ed Sulfonamides (sulfa-drugs) – take on empty-stomach with a full glass of water Drink plenty of water throughout the day (eight to ten 8-oz glasses if on a sulfa-drug) If taking sulfa-drug, avoid prolonged exposure to sunlight, unless using a good sunscreen ! Complete entire course of UTI drug treatment … even if symptoms improve !!! More UTI-drug patient ed Pyridium (phenazopyridine) – changes urine color to orange-red color! May stain clothing Cranberry juice, Vit-C, prunes make urine more acidic, making antiseptics more effective Carbonated drinks, citrus fruits make urine less acidic, making antiseptics less effective ! FEVER after starting the drugs may be a sign of a drug-reaction, not a UTI-symptom small, spastic-like bladder (‘tiny-tank’) that empties automatically when filled to a certain point Tofranil (imipramine) – anti-depressant DDAVP (desmopressin) – an anti-diuretic that actually increases the reabsorption of water -----available as a Nasal-spray, or tablet Time for Calculating Doses (oral, nonparenteral) the main 3 calculation methods --- Ratio-and-Proportion method --- Formula-Method --- Dimensional-analysis Choose the ONE method that you’re most comfortable with … and stick with it ! Why go with ONE method ? …you will become very familiar with your ‘chosen’ method … this will reduce the chance of medication errors that may occur from switching between calculation methods ! Basic Rules for confident calculating (see Box 9-1 on p.166 … dosage-forms) Always check UNIT’s (numerator/denominator) Always work the problem ON PAPER, even the math seems EASY Check and RE-CHECK all Decimals, Fractions LOOK at the RESULT! …does it look reasonable, does it make sense? Take ONE LAST LOOK to make sure you calculated dose in the correct units Box 9-1(p.166) Dosage-forms Know which types of dosage-forms can be divided, halved, altered Scored tablets – okay to break Oral – syrups and liquids – okay to alter Timed-release (sustained, delayed) – DO NOT BREAK or ALTER THESE ! … this can significantly change the rate of the drug’s dissolution (dissolving) and its absorption “labeling” the parts of the problem “DA” = dose-available, what is ‘on-hand’ “DO” = dose-ordered, what you ‘want’ “DF” = dosage-form, of the ‘on-hand’ “DG” = dose-given, this is the unknown-amount of the on-hand drug that we are calculating … this is the ‘X’ that we are solving for. Ratio-and-Proportion Units must match … numerator/denominator Ratio examples: 60-minutes/1-hour Proportion examples: 60min/1hr = 120min/2hr Let’s try one!: how many minutes in 2.5 hours ? a) we are looking for b) we know that x minutes/2.5 hours 60min/hr (60min = 1hr, written as fraction) … see next slide … ) ( Ratio-and-Proportion Let’s try one!: how many minutes in 2.5 hours ? 1st: we are looking for x minutes/2.5 hours 2nd: we know that 60min/hr …(60min = 1hr, written as fraction) so set-up the problem as xmin/2.5hr = 60min/hr 3rd: now we cross-multiply x-min x 1-hr = 2.5hr x 60min 4th: ‘hr’s cancel, leaving: x = (2.5)(60min) = 180 minutes … our final answer, which makes sense! 2-1/2 hours is 60min + 60min + 30min = 180 minutes. Formula - method “DA” = dose-available, what is ‘on-hand’ “DO” = dose-ordered, what you ‘want’ “DF” = dosage-form, of the ‘on-hand’ “DG” = dose-given, this is the unknown-amount of the on-hand drug that we are calculating Always check that the strengths of the drug- ordered (DO) and the drug-available (DA) are in the same-unit-of-measure! Formula-method cont. Look at page-171 Example #3, then Example #4 Ask yourself … (also, page-171) --what the Dr. ordered (DO)? --what strength is available (DA)? --what is the unit of measure (DF)? --how much do we need to give (DG)? REMEMBER ! … 1-grain = 60-mg (gr i = 60 mg) Dimensional - analysis Look at page-173 of Textbook Once learned, this is a very good system Try a few examples in your Textbook May be the ‘one for you’ ! QUESTIONS ???????????? ???????????? ????????????