Read Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference Online
Authors: Linda Skidmore-Roth
Canada only Side effects:
italics
= common;
bold
= life-threatening
Nurse Alert
Vitamin B-1
Func. class.:
Vit B
1
Chem. class.:
Water soluble
Do not confuse:
thiamine
/Tenormin
Needed for pyruvate metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism
Vit B
1
deficiency or polyneuritis, cheilosis adjunct with thiamine beriberi, Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome, pellagra, metabolic disorders, alcoholism
Hypersensitivity
Precautions:
Pregnancy (A)
• Adult:
PO
(Males) 1.2-1.5 mg; (females) 1.1 mg; (pregnancy) 1.4 mg; (breastfeeding) 1.4 mg
• Child 9-13 yr:
PO
0.9 mg
• Child 4-8 yr:
PO
0.6 mg
• Child 1-3 yr:
PO
0.5 mg
• Infant 7 mo-1 yr:
PO
0.3 mg
• Neonate and infant ≤6 mo:
PO
0.2 mg
• Adult:
PO
5-30 mg daily or in 3 divided doses × 1 mo;
IM/IV
5-30 mg daily or in 3 divided doses then convert to
PO
• Infant/child:
PO
10-50 mg daily × 2 wk then 5-10 mg daily × 1 mo;
IV/IM
10-25 mg/day × 2 wk then 5-10 mg daily × 1 mo
Available forms:
Tabs 50, 100, 250, 500 mg; inj 100 mg/ml; enteric-coated tabs 20 mg
•
By IM inj; rotate sites if pain and inflammation occur; do not mix with alkaline sol;
Z
-track to minimize pain
•
Undiluted at 100 mg/ml over 5 min
•
Diluted in compatible IV sol
Y-site compatibilities:
Famotidine
CNS:
Weakness, restlessness
CV:
Collapse, pulmonary edema,
hypotension
EENT:
Tightness of throat
GI:
Hemorrhage,
nausea, diarrhea
INTEG:
Angioneurotic edema,
cyanosis, sweating, warmth
SYST:
Anaphylaxis
PO/INJ:
Unused amounts excreted in urine (unchanged)
•
Anaphylaxis (IV only):
swelling of face, eyes, lips, throat, wheezing
•
Thiamine deficiency:
anorexia, weakness/pain, depression, confusion, blurred vision, tachycardia
•
Nutritional status: yeast, beef, liver, whole or enriched grains, legumes
•
Storage in tight, light-resistant container
•
Application of cold to help decrease pain
•
Therapeutic response: absence of nausea, vomiting, anorexia, insomnia, tachycardia, paresthesias, depression, muscle weakness
•
About the necessary foods to be included in diet: yeast, beef, liver, legumes, whole grains
Canada only Side effects:
italics
= common;
bold
= life-threatening
Nurse Alert
(thye-or-rid′a-zeen)
Func. class.:
Antipsychotic (typical)
Chem. class.:
Phenothiazine piperidine
Do not confuse:
thioridazine
/thiothixene/Thorazine
Depresses cerebral cortex, hypothalamus, limbic system, which control activity, aggression; blocks neurotransmission produced by dopamine at synapse; exhibits strong α-adrenergic and anticholinergic blocking action; mechanism for antipsychotic effects is unclear
Psychotic disorders, schizophrenia, behavioral problems in children, anxiety, major depressive disorders, organic brain syndrome
Unlabeled uses:
Behavioral symptoms associated with dementia in geriatric patients
Children <2 yr, hypersensitivity, coma, CNS depression
Black Box Warning:
QT prolongation, cardiac dysrhythmias
Precautions:
Pregnancy (C), breastfeeding, seizure disorders, hypertension, hepatic/pulmonary disease, renal failure, BPH, glaucoma, phenothiazine hypersensitivity, suicidal ideation, smoking, Reye’s syndrome, Parkinson’s disease
Black Box Warning:
Cardiac disease, dementia, AV block, bundle branch block, torsades de pointes
• Adult:
PO
25-100 mg tid, max 800 mg/day; dose gradually increased to desired response then reduced to minimum maintenance
• Adult:
PO
25 mg tid, range from 10 mg bid-qid to 50 mg tid-qid, max 800 mg/day for short period
• Geriatric:
PO
10-25 mg daily-bid, increase 4-7 days by 10-25 mg to desired dose, max 300 mg/day for short period
• Child 2-12 yr:
PO
0.5-3 mg/kg/day in divided doses, max 3 mg/kg/day
Available forms:
Tabs 10, 25, 50, 100 mg
•
Antiparkinsonian agent on order from prescriber for EPS
•
Avoid use with CNS depressants
•
Antacids separated by 2 hr or more
CNS:
EPS: pseudoparkinsonism, akathisia, dystonia, tardive dyskinesia
,
seizures,
headache
, confusion,
neuroleptic malignant syndrome,
dizziness, drowsiness
CV:
Orthostatic hypotension,
cardiac arrest,
ECG changes,
tachycardia, QT prolongation, torsades de pointes
EENT:
Blurred vision, glaucoma, dry eyes
GI:
Dry mouth, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, constipation
, diarrhea, jaundice, weight gain
GU:
Urinary retention, urinary frequency, enuresis, impotence, amenorrhea, gynecomastia, ejaculation dysfunction, priapism
HEMA:
Anemia,
leukopenia, leukocytosis, agranulocytosis
INTEG:
Rash
, photosensitivity, dermatitis
RESP:
Laryngospasm,
dyspnea,
respiratory depression
PO:
Onset erratic; peak 2-4 hr; metabolized by liver; excreted in urine, breast milk; crosses placenta; half-life 26-36 hr; 91%-99% protein binding
Increase:
QT prolongation—class IA/III antidysrhythmics, some phenothiazines, β agonists, local anesthetics, tricyclics, haloperidol, chloroquine, droperidol, pentamidine; CYP3A4 inhibitors (amiodarone, clarithromycin, erythromycin, telithromycin, troleandomycin), arsenic trioxide, levomethadyl; CYP3A4 substrates (methadone, pimozide, QUEtiapine, quiNIDine, risperiDONE, ziprasidone), CYP2D6 inhibitors
•
Oversedation: other CNS depressants, alcohol, barbiturate anesthetics
Increase:
anticholinergic effects—anticholinergics
Decrease:
antiparkinson’s agent effects
Decrease:
thioridazine effect—lithium, barbiturates
Decrease:
antihypertensive effect—centrally acting antihypertensives
Decrease:
absorption—aluminum hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide antacids
Increase:
LFTs, prolactin, bilirubin, alk phos
Decrease:
Hct/Hgb, platelets, granulocytes, leukocytes, neutrocytes, eosinophils
•
Mental status before 1st dose
•
I&O ratio; palpate bladder if low urinary output occurs, urinary retention may be the cause
•
Bilirubin, CBC, LFTs monthly
•
Urinalysis recommended before and during prolonged therapy
•
Affect, orientation, LOC, reflexes, gait, coordination, sleep pattern disturbances
•
B/P standing, lying; include pulse and respirations q4hr during initial treatment; establish baseline before starting treatment; report drops of 30 mm Hg
•
Dizziness, faintness, palpitations, tachycardia on rising
•
EPS
including akathisia (inability to sit still, no pattern to movements), tardive dyskinesia (bizarre movements of jaw, mouth, tongue, extremities), pseudoparkinsonism (rigidity, tremors, pill rolling, shuffling gait)
Neuroleptic malignancy syndrome:
altered mental status, muscle rigidity, increased CPK, hyperthermia, dyspnea, fatigue
QT prolongation:
ECG, ejection fraction; assess for chest pain, palpitations, dyspnea
•
Constipation, urinary retention daily; increase bulk, water in diet
•
Supervised ambulation if needed until stabilized on medication; do not involve patient in strenuous exercise program because fainting is possible; patient should not stand still for long periods
•
Sips of water, candy, gum for dry mouth
•
Storage in tight, light-resistant container; avoid contact with skin
•
Therapeutic response: decrease in emotional excitement, hallucinations, delusions, paranoia; reorganization of patterns of thought, speech
•
That orthostatic hypotension occurs frequently; to rise from sitting or lying position gradually; to avoid hazardous activities until stabilized on medication
•
To avoid hot tubs, hot showers, tub baths because hypotension may occur
•
To avoid abrupt withdrawal of thioridazine because EPS may result; that product should be withdrawn slowly
•
To avoid OTC preparations (cough, hay fever, cold) unless approved by prescriber; that serious product interactions may occur; to avoid use with alcohol because increased drowsiness may occur
•
To use sunscreen to prevent burns
•
About compliance with product regimen
•
About the necessity for meticulous oral hygiene because oral candidiasis may occur
•
To report sore throat, malaise, fever, bleeding, mouth sores; if these occur, CBC should be drawn and product discontinued; that product may cause vision impairment, should be reported to prescriber
•
That in hot weather, heat stroke may occur; to take extra precautions to stay cool
•
That product may cause discoloration of urine
Lavage if orally ingested, provide an airway; do not induce vomiting; CV monitoring, continuous ECG