Endocrine
System Drugs
THYROID HORMONE (T3&T4)
·
This agent
increases serum T3 and T4 levels and suppresses TSH production.
·
Indication:
o
Treatment of
hypothyroidism (myxedema)
o
Treatment for
diffuse non-toxic goiter
o
Chronic lymphocyte
thyroiditis (Hashimoto's)
o
Thyroid carcinoma
o
Are also used with
antithyroid drug (e.g methimazole) to manage thyrotoxicosis.
·
Contraindication: contraindicated in untreated hyperthyroidism
Drugs
|
|
Levothyroxine sodium
(Levothroid®, Synthroid®)
|
§ SyntheticT4
§ Increases the metabolic rate of all tissues in the
body
§ Suppresses TSH production
|
Liothyronine (Cytomel®)
|
§ Synthetic T3
§ Frequently used as an initial therapy for treating
myxedema
|
Liotrix (Euthroid®,
Thyrolar®)
|
§ A combination of levothyroxine and liothyronine (4:1
ratio)
|
Side effects:
·
Tachycardia,
palpitations
|
·
Angina pectoris
|
·
Hypertension
|
·
Cardiovascular
collapse
|
·
Thyroid crisis
|
|
Nursing consideration:
ü
Monitor T3
,T4,TSH, and radioactive-iodine uptake until stable
ü
Monitor for any
adverse reactions e.g fever, arrhythmias, hypertension, heat intolerance.
ü
Monitor
height,weight and psychomotor development
if given to a child
ü
Administer in
morning if possible as a single dose to decrease sleeplessness
ü
Levothyroxine and
liothyronine may decrease the effective of digitalis preparation.
ü
Estrogen can
increase the effect of liothyronine
ü
Advise patient
that thyroxine therapy is not a cure but a long term treatment to control
symptoms.
ü
Caution patient to
avoid drug preparation containing iodine, iodine-rich food, iodized salt,
soybeans, tofu, turnips and high iodine seafoods.
ANTITHYROID DRUG
·
Reduces thyroid
hormone by inhibiting thyroid secretion.
·
Indication:
o
Thyrotoxicosis
(e.g Grave's disease)
o
thyrotoxic crisis
o
Preparation for
thyroidectomy
·
Contraindication:
Known hypersensitivity to methimazole and carbimazole, pregnant woman, hepatic
disease, agarnulocytosis.
Example:
Drugs
|
||
Thioamides: Inhibits the
synthesis of thyroid hormone
|
||
·
Methimazole
(Tapazole®)
|
- More potent
than PTU and has a longer half-life.
|
|
·
Propylthiouracil
(PTU)
|
|
|
·
Iodide (Lugol's
solution)
|
Used to reduce size &
vascularity thyroid gland
|
|
Side effects:
§
Rash, hives
|
§
Headache
|
§
Hair loss
|
§
Nausea and
vomiting
|
§
Muscle and joint
pain
§
Agranulocytosis
|
§
Goiter (prolong
drug use)
§
Hepatotoxicity
|
Nursing consideration:
ü Monitor laboratory results
ü Assess clinical response to medication after 3 weeks of
therapy (e.g increased weight, ↓ pulse, ↓ T4 level)
ü Check for any signs of hypothyroidism (e.g edema, cold
intolerance, mental depression)
ü Asses for bone marrow depression: infection, sore
throat, fever, fatigue
ü Monitor for signs of agranulocytosis. E.g fever or sore
throat.
ü Discontinue drug 3-4 weeks before radioactive iodine
uptake (as indicated)
ü Lithium and digoxin increase the action of the thyroid
drug
ü When used with oral anticoagulant (e.g warfarin), they
can increase the potency of the anticoagulant.
ü Inform patient that tachycardia, diarrhea, fever, and
irritability are symptoms of inadequate dosage. Advise patient to report to
physician when these symptoms occur.
ü Advise patient to abstain from breast-feeding after
delivery because drug appear in breast milk
VITAMIN D ANALOGUE
·
Increases serum
calcium levels in the blood by promoting calcium absorption from the GI tract,
reabsorption of calcium in the renal tubules and calcium release from bone to
the bloodstream.
·
Indication:
o
Treatment of
hypoparathyroidism; hypocalcemia
o
Renal
osteodystrophy
o
Postmenopausal
osteoporosis
o
Rickets
o
Psoriasis
·
Contraindication: hypersensitivity, hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypervitaminosis D,
malabsorption syndrome
Example:
·
calcitriol
(Rocaltrol®)
|
·
dihydrotachysterol
(Hytakerol®)
|
·
ergocalciferol
(Drisdol®)
|
·
calcifediol
(Calderol®)
|
Side effects:
occasional skin irritation
Nursing Consideration:
ü
Monitor for signs
and symptoms of vitamin D intoxication: headache, somnolence, hypertension,
arrhythmias, anorexia, photophobia, bone & muscle pain, hyperthermia
ü
Assess for signs
of hypercalcemia and inform patient signs of hypercalcemia as well.
ü
Monitor laboratory
results
ü
Educate patient
about food rich in calcium
CALCITONIN
·
Decreases serum
calcium by a direct effect on bone (calcium deposition) & kidney (calcium
excretion) and by opposing to parathyroid hormone.
·
Indication:
o
Hypercalcemia
o
Postmenopausal and
corticosteroid-induced osteoporosis
o
Paget's disease
·
Contraindication:
hypersensitivity to drug, children
Examples:
·
Calcitonin [human]
(Cibacalcin®)
·
Calcitonin
[salmon] (Calcimar®) - more potent
Side effects:
·
Nausea &
vomiting
|
·
GI disturbances
|
·
Hot flushes
|
·
Metallic taste
on mouth
|
·
Loss of appetite
|
Nursing Consideration:
ü Assess and monitor blood results when patient is under
calcitonin medication
ü Advise patient to report signs of hypercalcemia such as
nausea, vomiting, muscle weakness, restlessness, and confusion.
ü Educate patient that she needs to inform her health
care provider about her pregnancy status before taking calcitonin
ü Advise patient that warmth and flushing occurs and
usually last 1 hour
ü Educate the patient how to monitor nutritional status:
e.g check diet for sources of vitamin D and calcium.
DIPHOSPHONATES (bisphosphonates)
·
Group of inorganic
compounds that inhibits osteoclast activity by binding to bone hydroxyapatite
thus preventing bone resorption.
·
Indication:
o
Prevention (high
risk) and/or treatment of osteoporosis
o
Paget's disease
o
Heterotopic
ossification
·
Contraindication: hypocalcemia, inability to stant or sit upright for at least 30 minutes,
achalasia (esophagus), hypersensitivity
Examples:
·
alendronate
(Fosamax®)
|
·
etidronate
(Didronel®)
|
·
pamidronate
(Aredia®)
|
·
risedronate
(Actonel®)
|
Side effects:
·
Abdominal pain,
constipation
|
·
Diarrhea,
flatulence
|
·
Musculoskeletal
pain
|
·
Headache
|
·
Esophageal
ulcer; dysphagia
|
|
Nursing Consideration:
ü Assess for signs of hypercalcemia such as nausea,
vomiting, muscle weakness, restlessness, and confusion.
ü Determine the result from bone density test
ü Monitor alkaline phosphatase
ü Best to take drug in the morning with plenty of water
(not mineral water) and before meal and other medication.
ü After swallowing, advise patient not to lie down.
Remain fully upright or walking for at least 30 minutes. This prevent
esophageal irritation
ü Advise patient to perform weight-bearing exercises or
activities to promote an increase in bone density.
GLUCOCORTICOID
·
This group of
steroid drugs has various properties that provide a wide range of benefits to
patients. These includes:
o
Anti-Inflammatory
effect - Its ability to inhibit prostaglanding synthesis, migration of
macrophages, phagocytosis and lysosomal release will result to the attenuation
of heat, erythema, swelling and tenderness on the affected area.
o
Anti-Allerigic
(Immunosuppresion)
·
Indication:
o
Cortisol
replacement in adrenal cortical hypofunction (e.g Addison's disease, inadequate
ACTH release)
o
Non-endocrine disorders:
Disorders (d/o)
|
Example
|
effect
|
Allergic
d/o
|
Anaphylactic
reaction, drug induced allergic reaction, severe hay fever
|
↓
inflammation
|
Collagen
d/o
|
Dermatomyositis,
lupus
|
Immunosuppression
|
Dermatologic
d/o
|
Alopecia
areata, psoriasis, dermatitis, pemphigus
|
↓
inflammation
|
Gastrointestinal
d/o
|
Inflammatory
bowel disease, Crohn's disease
|
↓
inflammation
|
Hematologic
d/o
|
Autoimmune
hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia
|
Immunosuppression
|
Nonrheumatic
inflammation
|
Bursitis,
tenosynovitis
|
↓
inflammation
|
Neoplastic
disease
|
Leukemia,
lymphomas, nasal polyps
|
Immunosuppression
|
Neurologic
disease
|
Multiple sclerosis, myasthenia
gravis, meningitis
|
↓
inflammation,
Immunosuppresion
|
Neurogenic
trauma
|
Brain
surgery, closed head injury
|
↓
edema
|
Ophthalmic
d/o
|
Conjunctivitis,
optic neuritis
|
↓
inflammation
|
Respiratory
v
|
Bronchial
asthma, P.tuberculosis
|
↓
inflammation
|
Rheumatic
d/o
|
Ankylosing
spondylitis, RA, DJD
|
↓
inflammation,
Immunosuppresion
|
Contraindication: Systemic fungal infections, administration of live
virus vaccines, varicella, ocular tuberculosis
Example:
Glucocorticoids
|
|
· cortisone (Cortone
acetate®)
|
Short acting
|
· hydrocortisone (Cortef®)
|
|
· prednisolone
(Delta-Cortef®)
|
Intermediate Acting
|
· prednisone (Aristocort®)
|
|
· methyprednisolone
(Medrol®)
|
|
· betamethasone (Celestone®)
|
Long Acting
|
· beclomethasone (Vanceril®)
|
|
· dexamethasone (Decadron®)
|
Side effects:
·
Hyperglycemia
·
Hypertension
·
Euphoria or
psychosis
·
Growth
retardation
·
Peptic ulcers
·
Osteoporosis
|
·
Edema
·
Sodium &
water retention
·
Increased
intraocular pressure (glaucoma)
|
·
↓ extremity
size/muscle wasting
·
Thinned skin
with purpura
·
Abnormal fat
deposits
|
Nursing consideration:
ü Monitor vitals signs and blood results to detect early
signs of adverse effects.
ü Instruct patient to avoid persons with infection (e.g
upper respiratory tract infection/ URTI). These drugs suppress the immune
system
ü Instruct patient to report signs and symptoms of a
medication overdose or Cushing's Syndrome.
ü Barbiturates, phenytoin and rifampin decreases the
effect of glucocorticoids.
ü Glucocorticoids increase the potency of NSAIDs thus
greater risk of gastric bleeding & ulceration.
ü Glucocorticoids will decrease the effect of oral
anticoagulant (e.g warfarin).
ü Potassium-wasting diuretics combined with
glucocorticoids will have a greater loss in serum potassium, resulting in
hypokalemia.
ü High protein diet should be given to patients who are
also administered with Florinef®. This drug causes a negative nitrogen balance.
ü There may be a need to adjust insulin dosage among
patients with diabetes. Glucocorticoids are hyperglycemic agents.
ü Discontinuation of the drug should be tapered to avoid
severe adrenocortical insufficiency.
MINERALOCORTICOID
·
Steroid hormone
(aldosterone analogue) that enhances the reabsorption of sodium and chloride
and further induces the excretion of potassium and hydrogen from the renal
tubules thus helping to maintain fluid and electrolyte balance.
·
Indication:
Usually combined with glucocorticoids in Corticosteroid replacement therapy for
the treatment of Adrenal Cortical Insufficiency (Addison's disease)
·
Contraindication: Systemic fungal infections or known sensitivity to the medication
·
Example: fludrocortisone
(Florinef®)
Side effects:
·
Hypokalemia
·
Hypocalcemia
·
Sodium &
water retention
|
·
GI disturbances
·
Insomnia; mood
swing
·
Increased
susceptibility to infection
|
·
Delayed wound
healing
·
Increased
appetite & weight gain
|
Nursing Consideration:
ü Monitor VS and blood work.
ü Instruct the patient to take the drug with food or
milk.
ü Encourage the patient to have a potassium-rich diet.
ü Inform patient to avoid crowded areas or person with
infection.
ü To avoid adrenal insufficiency, supportive may be
required in times of stress (e.g surgery, severe illness) - as indicated.
ORAL HYPOGLYCEMIC DRUGS
Sulfonylureas
·
This group of
drugs has the ability to stimulate the beta cells to further produce insulin
thus lowering serum glucose level.
Non-Sulfonylureas
·
This group of
drugs has a different mechanism in lowering serum glucose level as compared to
the action of sulfonylureas. They do not induce hypoglycemia with the exception of meglitinides.
·
Biguanides:
o
It decreases
hepatic production of glucose from stored glycogen following a meal and blunts
the degree of postprandial hyperglycemia.
o
It is also
decreased the absorption of glucose in the small intestine.
Generic name
|
Brand name
|
Consideration
|
Sulfonylureas
|
· Stimulate beta cells to produce more insulin.
· May induce hypoglycemia.
· These drugs may be combined with nonsulfonylurease or
insulin.
Indication:
Type 2 diabetes mellitus
Contraindication:
o
Liver and kidney
dysfunctions
o
Type 1 DM
o
Pregnancy and
breastfeeding
o
During stress,
surgery or severe infection
Common Side Effects:
· GI disturabances (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
abdominal pain)
· Visual disturbances
· Drowsiness, confusion
· Headache
|
|
First Generation: Short Acting
|
||
tolbutamide
|
Orinase®
|
|
|
||
First Generation: Intermediate Acting
|
||
acetohexamide
|
Dymolar®
|
|
tolazamide
|
Tolinase®
|
|
|
||
First Generation: Long Acting
|
||
chlorpropamide
|
Diabinese®
|
|
|
||
Second Generation
|
||
glipizide
|
Glucotrol®
|
|
glyburide nonmicronized
|
DiaBeta®,
Micronase®
|
|
glyburide micronized
|
Glynase®
|
|
glimepiride
|
Amaryl®
|
Nonsulfonylurease
|
·
These drugs may
be combined with sulfonylureas/insulin or monotherapy.
Indication: Type 2 diabetes mellits
Contraindication:
o
Hypersensitivity
o
Concurrent
infection
o
Hepatic or renal
dysfunction
o
Cardiopulmonary
insufficiency
o
Alcoholism
Common side effects:
·
Bitter or
metallic taste
·
Dizziness,
nausea, vomiting
·
Flatulence,
diarrhea
·
Lactic acidosis
·
Malabsorption of
amino acids, vitamin B12 & folic acid
|
|
Biguanides
|
||
Metformin
|
Glucophage®
|
|
|
||
Alpha-Glucosidase Inhibitors
|
||
Acarbose
|
Precose®
|
|
Miglitol
|
Glyset®
|
|
|
||
Thiazolidinediones
|
||
Pioglitazone HCl
|
Actos®
|
|
Rosiglitazone maleate
|
Avandia®
|
|
|
||
Meglitinides
|
||
Repaglinide
|
Prandin®
|
|
Neteglinide
|
Starlix®
|
|
|
||
Fixed Combination
|
||
glyburide + metformin
|
Glucovane®
|
INSULIN
·
Insulin lowers
serum glucose levels by exerting its effects by first binding to a receptor
located on the surface membrane of target cells. It then stimulates glucose
carriers that promote facilitation of glucose diffusion into the target cells.
·
Insulin is
administered subcutaneously, at 45 o - 90 o angle. A 90 o angle is for patient with
adequate fatty tissue while the 45 o -60o angle is for
patients with little fatty tissue. Regular insulin is the only type that can be
administered IV. Insulin can not be administered orally because GI secretions
destroy insulin.
·
Insulin absorption
is greater when injected in the deltoid and abdominal areas than when given in
the thigh and buttock areas.
·
Indication:
Type 1 diabetes mellitus, Type 2 DM which cannot be controlled by diet,
exercise and oral antidiabetics.
·
Contraindication:
o
Hypoglycemia
o
Insulinoma
o
Diabetic coma
o
Hypersensitivity
reaction
·
Characteristics of
Insulin:
o
Onset: length
of time before insulin reaches the bloodstream and begins lowering blood
glucose.
o
Peak: time
during which insulin is at maximum strength in terms of lowering blood glucose.
o
Duration: how long insulin continues to lower blood
glucose.
·
Types of Insulin:
Type
|
Characteristics
|
||
Rapid-acting insulin
|
|||
insulin lispro (Humalog®)
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 5-12 mins
: 0.5-2 hrs
: 3-4 hrs
|
|
insulin aspart (Novolog®)
|
|||
insulin glulisine (Apidra®)
|
|||
|
|||
Short-acting insulin (human)
|
|||
Regular
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 20-30 mins
: 2-4 hrs
: 6-8 hrs
|
|
Humulin R®
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
Intermediate Acting
|
|||
*NPH insulin
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 1-4 hrs
: 6-10 hrs
: 12-20 hrs
|
|
Humulin N insulin
|
|||
Lente insulin
|
|||
Humulin L insulin
|
|||
|
|||
Long-Acting insulin
|
|||
Ultralente insulin
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 3-6 hrs
: 10-16 hrs
: 18-24 hrs
|
|
insulin glargine (Lantus®)
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 6-10 hrs
: unknown
: 20-24 hrs
|
|
insulin detemir (Levemir®)
|
|||
Combination
|
||
Humulin 70/30
(isophane 70%, regular 30%)
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 0.5 hr
: 4-8 hrs
: 22-24 hrs
|
Humulin 50/50
(isophane 50%, regular 50%)
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 0.5 hr
: 4-8 hrs
: 24 hrs
|
Humulin 75/25
(lispro protamine 75%,
lispro 25%)
|
Onset
Peak
Duration
|
: 15 min
: 0.5-6 hrs
: 20-24 hrs
|
*NPH - neutral protamine Hagedorn
Alternative Devices for Taking Insulin:
Injection aids
·
Devices that help
users give injections with needles and syringes through the use of
spring-loaded syringe holders or stabilizing guides.
Insulin jet injectors
·
It sends a fine
spray of insulin through the skin by a high-pressure air mechanism instead of needles.
External insulin pumps
·
Devices that
deliver insulin through narrow, flexible plastic tubing that ends with a needle
inserted just under the skin near the abdomen
Side effects:
·
Allergic reaction
(e.g redness, hives)
·
Hypoglycemia
·
Temporary visual
impairment
·
Lipodystrophy
Nursing Consideration:
ü Determine the type of insulin prescribed and educate
patient about insulin storage, preparation, administration and action .
o The nurse or patient must roll, not shake, the cloudy
insulin bottles before use in order to ensure that the insulin and other
components are well mixed.
o When preparing a mixture of regular insulin with
another insulin preparation, draw the Regular insulin into the syringe first
before NPH/Lente
o Lente & Ultra Lente are not stable if mixed with
NPH
o Administer a mixed dose of insulin within 5 to 15
minutes of preparation to avoid decrease potency of the drug
o To prevent dosage error, be certain that calibration of
units of the insulin syringe match with the insulin concentration.
o Teach parents/child to adjust insulin administration
based on blood-glucose testing and glycosuria, during an illness or after
changes in food intake or activities
ü Instruct the patient about the need to develop a
"site rotation pattern" for insulin administration to avoid
lipoatrophy or lipohypertrophy. Injection should be 1 1/2 inches apart within
the anatomical area
ü Advise patient to administer insulin and take
prescribed diet on a consistent schedule
ü Observe for signs of insulin shock/hypoglycemia (see chapter 8); if present administer
10-15 g of fast acting carbohydrates. In severe hypoglycemia, administer
glucagon as prescribed.
ü Teach patient how to monitor blood glucose using Home
Blood Glucose Monitoring (HBGM)
ü There is a need to decrease insulin dosage with
increased exercise and increase insulin dosage in stressful times (e.g severe
infection)
ü Advise parents to obtain a medical alert bracelet with
information regarding insulin dosage prescription
GLUCAGON
·
Endogenous
glucagon, a hyperglycemic hormone, is secreted by the alpha cells of the
pancreatic islets.
·
Exogenous glucagon
is administered to patients in order to stimulate glycogenesis in the liver
thus increasing serum glucose level.
·
It is administered
subcutaneously, intramuscularly or IV
·
Indication:
·
Insulin-induced
severe hypoglycemia, especially in patients who are unable to ingest glucose
due to loss of consciousness
·
Contraindication: hyperglycemia, known hypersensitivity
Example:
·
GlucaGen®;
Glucagon Emergency Kit
Side effects:
·
Nausea &
vomiting
·
Trainsient
increase in blood pressure
·
Tachycardia
·
Gastric
hypotonicity
Nursing Consideration:
ü Do not administer glucagon if particulate matter,
cloudiness or discoloration is noted or if the solution shows signs of gel
formation
ü Determine if the patient is taking anticoagulants. May
increase hypoprothrombinemic effects resulting in bleeding.
ü Monitor serum glucose level. Blood glucose begins to
rise after 5 to 20 after administration.
DIAZOXIDE
·
A hyperglycemic
drug that inhibits insulin release from the beta cells and stimulating release
of epinephrine from the adrenal medulla.
·
Indication:
Chronic hypoglycemia caused by hyperinsulinism (e.g islet cell cancer);
Malignant hypertension
·
Contraindication: hypersensitivity to thiazides, diazoxide and other sulfonamide-derived
drugs
Example: Proglycem® - oral; Hyperstat® -
IV
Side effects:
·
Nausea
·
Mild itchiness
·
Decreased sense of
taste
·
Headache,
dizziness, anxiety
·
Tachycardia
Nursing consideration:
ü Monitor blood pressure especially for patients
administered with parenteral form of diazoxide. Severe hypotension may occur
ü Check blood sugar. Onset of action is 1 hour after
administration
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