This is a high-yield question that is often asked on exams and clinical rotations. This mnemonic helps you remember which vitamin K-dependent factors warfarin affects.
Warfarin, brand name Coumadin, is an anticoagulant that acts by inhibiting the synthesis of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors, which include Factors II, VII, IX, and X, and the anticoagulant proteins C and S.
Part 2 of It’s all in the name! Hope these mnemonics make it easier for you to memorize these medications.
💊 Flomax: brand name for tamsulosin, a medication used to treat urinary retention or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Its name tells you that it is used to ‘maximize flow’.
💊 Lunesta: a sleep aid medication whose root word Luna means moon in Latin.
💊 Xarelto: brand name for rivaroxaban, an oral anticoagulant. Its name hints at its mechanism of action, inhibiting factor Xa in the clotting cascade.
💊 Fosamax: brand name for alendronic acid, it is a medication used to treat osteoporosis or bone weakening. Its name means os = bone, and max = great in Latin.
💊 Prevacid: brand name for lansoprazole, it belongs to a class of proton pump inhibitors. Its name tells you that it ‘prevents acid’ and is used to treat GERD and acid-reflux disorders.
💊 Glucophage: brand name for metformin. It is a medication used to treat type 2 diabetes. Its name derives from the Greek words gluco= glucose and phage = eat or consume. This helps you remember metformin’s mechanism of action is to increase uptake of glucose by cells in the body to be used as energy (or in other words increase insulin sensitivity).
There are a plethora of drug facts to memorize for school, but it is definitely helpful when their names hint at what they are used for, their mechanism of action, frequency, or duration.
💊 Lasix: short for ‘last six hours’ because of the 6-hour duration of action. Try not to administer this diuretic to patients after 4 pm to decrease nighttime awakenings.
💊 Macrobid: this formulation of Macrodantin is given BID (twice a day). Macrodantin is recommended to be given 4 times a day. Ensure you are using the right formulation for the right frequency.
💊 Protonix: Protonix belongs to a class of proton pump inhibitors. Its brand name, Protonix, tells you that it is used to ‘nix protons’ or acid and is used to treat GERD and acid-reflux disorders.
💊 Lopressor: brand name for metoprolol, a beta-blocker that is used for high blood pressure. The brand name, lo-pressor, tells you that it is used to help ‘lower pressures’.
💊 Flonase: brand name for fluticasone nasal spray. Its name, Flonase, sounds an awful lot like ‘flow nasal’ which tells you that it is used to treat allergies that commonly cause nasal congestion.
💊 Ambien: AM is the sig for morning and Bien means good in Spanish. It is a sleeping aid medication that translates into ‘good morning’.
Warfarin is an oral anticoagulant most frequently used to control and prevent thromboembolic events. ACCP recommends that patients newly started on warfarin be bridged with LMWH or unfractionated heparin for 5 days AND until therapeutic INR is achieved.
🌟High-yield fact🌟 The presence of a therapeutic INR does not confer protection from clot formation and expansion during the first few days of warfarin therapy, so if your patient’s INR is 2.0 on day 3, it is recommended to continue bridging until day 5.
This recommendation is based on the fact that the anticoagulant activity of warfarin depends on the clearance of functional clotting factors already present in the body.
Warfarin works by inhibiting new clotting factors from forming but requires that the old factors be cleared from the body. The clearance of these clotting factors is determined by their half-lives. The earliest changes in the International Normalized Ratio (INR) are typically noted 24 to 36 hours after a dose of warfarin is administered. These changes are due to the clearance of functional factor VII, which is the vitamin K–dependent clotting factor with the shortest half-life (6 hours: after 3-5 half-lives or 24-36 hours it will be eliminated from the body). The factor with the longest half-life, prothrombin or factor II, will take 5 days to clear from the body, hence why we need to bridge for at least 5 days AND until therapeutic INR is achieved.
Calcium channel blockers (CCBs) are used in the treatment of many cardiovascular conditions. They are divided into subclasses, non-dihydropyridines and dihydropyridines.
The non-dihydropyridine CCBs cause less vasodilation and more cardiac depression than dihydropyridine CCBs (hence why they are not recommended in decompensated heart failure). They cause reductions in heart rate and contractility.
Dihydropyridine CCBs have more vascular selectivity and fewer cardiac effects. They are indicated in the treatment of hypertension and angina. They do not suppress AV conduction or the SA node automaticity.
Antibiotics can be bacteriostatic (static=unmoving) meaning that the agent prevents the growth of bacteria or bactericidal (rhymes with suicidal) meaning that it kills bacteria.
Keep in mind that bacteriostatic and bactericidal categorizations in clinical practice are not absolute and can vary depending on the dose and what is being treated.
👉🏻 Insulin Analogs are available for insulin replacement therapy. 👉🏻 Insulins also are classified by the timing of their action in your body – specifically, how quickly they start to act, when they have a maximal effect and how long they act.
Ever been on corticosteroids before? Due to the activation of the sympathetic system (“fight or flight”), your body responds with an increase in blood pressure, blood sugar, mood changes, and blood volume. With short term use, side effects are minor but can vary depending on their dose and how long they are taken.
Diuretics work to enhance sodium and water excretion through 4 main sites on the nephron.
1– Proximal convoluted tubule: Mannitol and acetazolamide (extends into the descending loop of Henle)
2– Ascending loop of Henle: loop diuretics
3– Distal convoluted tubule: thiazides
4– Collecting ducts: Potassium-sparing diuretic (e.g., spironolactone and triamterene)
Phenytoin has a narrow therapeutic window (10-20 mg/L) and requires serum drug monitoring to prevent toxicities. Check out this awesome mnemonic on how to remember its side effects!