Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference (50 page)

BOOK: Mosby's 2014 Nursing Drug Reference
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atovaquone/proguanil

(a-toe′va-kwon)

Malarone

Func. class.:
Antiprotozoal

Chem. class.:
Aromatic diamide derivative

ACTION:

The constituents of Malarone, atovaquone, and proguanil hydrochloride interfere with 2 different pathways involved in DNA/RNA synthesis in protozoa

USES:

Malaria, malaria prophylaxis

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

Hypersensitivity to this product, malaria prophylaxis in patients with severe renal impairment

Precautions:
Pregnancy (C), breastfeeding, children, hepatic/GI/renal disease

DOSAGE AND ROUTES
Calculator
Treatment of acute, uncomplicated
P. falciparum
malaria malarone adult strength tabs

• Adult/adolescent/child >40 kg: PO
4 adult strength tabs every day as a single dose × 3 consecutive days

• Child 31-40 kg: PO
3 adult strength tabs every day as a single dose × 3 consecutive days

• Child 21-30 kg: PO
2 adult strength tabs every day as a single dose × 3 consecutive days

• Infant/child 11-20 kg: PO
1 adult strength tab every day × 3 consecutive days

Malarone Pediatric Tabs

• Infant/child 11-20 kg: PO
4 pediatric tabs every day × 3 consecutive days

• Infant/child 9-10 kg: PO
3 pediatric tabs every day × 3 consecutive days

• Infant/child 5-8 kg: PO
2 pediatric tabs every day every 3 consecutive days

P. falciparum
malaria prophylaxis, including chloroquine resistance areas

• 
Each Malarone adult strength tab contains atovaquone 250 mg/proguanil 100 mg; Malarone Pediatric tablet contains atovaquone 62.5 mg/proguanil 25 mg

Malarone adult strength tabs

• Adult/adolescent/child >40 kg: PO
1 adult strength tab every day; begin prophylaxis 1-2 days before entering the endemic area; continue daily during the stay and for 7 days after leaving the area

Malarone Pediatric Tab

• Child 31-40 kg: PO
3 pediatric tabs every day; begin prophylaxis 1-2 days before entering the endemic area; continue daily during the stay and for 7 days after leaving the area

• Child 21-30 kg: PO
2 pediatric tabs every day; begin prophylaxis 1-2 days before entering the endemic area; continue daily during the stay and for 7 days after leaving the area

• Infant/child 11-20 kg: PO
1 pediatric tab every day; begin prophylaxis 1-2 days before entering the endemic area; continue daily during the stay and for 7 days after leaving the area

Available forms:
Tabs (adult) 250 mg atovaquone/proguanil 100 mg; tabs (pediatric) 62.5 atovaquone/proguanil 25 mg

Administer

• 
Give with food or with milk or milk-based drink (nutritional supplement shake) to enhance oral absorption of atovaquone; food with high fat content is desired

• 
Give dose at the same time each day, administer a repeat dose if vomiting occurs within 1 hour after dosing

• 
Tabs may be crushed and mixed with condensed milk for children unable to swallow whole tablets

SIDE EFFECTS

CNS:
Dizziness, headache, anxiety, insomnia
, asthenia, fever

CV:
Hypotension

GI:
Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
, anorexia, increased AST/ALT,
acute pancreatitis,
constipation, abdominal pain

HEMA:
Anemia, neutropenia

INTEG:
Pruritus, urticaria,
rash

META:
Hyperkalemia, hypoglycemia, hyponatremia

OTHER:
Cough, dyspnea

PHARMACOKINETICS

Atovaquone excreted unchanged in feces (94%), highly protein bound (99%), Protaguanil 75% protein bound, 40%-60% excreted in urine, hepatic metabolism; half-life 2-3 days

INTERACTIONS

Increase:
Level of indinavir

Decrease:
Effect of atovaquone-rifampin, rifabutin, tetracycline, metoclopramide

Increase:
AST, ALT, alk phos

Decrease:
Glucose, neutrophils, Hgb, sodium

NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
Assess:

• 
Malaria:
Identify when the patient will be entering an area with malaria

• 
Bowel pattern before, during treatment

• 
Respiratory status: rate, character, wheezing, dyspnea; risk for respiratory infection

• 
Allergies before treatment, reaction to each medication

• 
CBC, LFTs, serum amylase, creatinine/BUN, sodium; increases in LFTs can persist for 4 wk after discontinuation of treatment

Evaluate:
Therapeutic response:

• 
Resolution/prevention of malaria

Teach patient/family:

• 
To take with food to increase plasma concentrations

Canada only   Side effects:
italics
= common;
bold
= life-threatening   
Nurse Alert

RARELY USED
atracurium (Rx)

(a-tra-kyoor′ee-um)

Func. class.:
Neuromuscular blocker (nondepolarizing)

USES:

Facilitation of endotracheal intubation, skeletal muscle relaxation during mechanical ventilation, surgery, or general anesthesia

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

Hypersensitivity

 

Black Box Warning:

Respiratory insufficiency

DOSAGE AND ROUTES
Calculator

• Adult and child >2 yr: IV BOL
0.4-0.5 mg/kg then 0.08-0.1 mg/kg 20-45 min after 1st dose if needed for prolonged
procedures; give smaller doses with halothane

• Child 1 mo-2 yr: IV BOL
0.3-0.4 mg/kg

Canada only   Side effects:
italics
= common;
bold
= life-threatening   
Nurse Alert

HIGH ALERT
atropine (Rx)

(a′troe-peen)

Atreza, AtroPen, Sal-Tropine

Func. class.:
Antidysrhythmic, anticholinergic parasympatholytic, antimuscarinic

Chem. class.:
Belladonna alkaloid

Do not confuse:
atropine
/Akarpine

ACTION:

Blocks acetylcholine at parasympathetic neuroeffector sites; increases cardiac output, heart rate by blocking vagal stimulation in heart; dries secretions by blocking vagus

USES:

Bradycardia <40-50 bpm, bradydysrhythmia, reversal of anticholinesterase agents, insecticide poisoning, blocking cardiac vagal reflexes, decreasing secretions before surgery, antispasmodic with GU, biliary surgery, bronchodilator, AV heart block

Unlabeled uses:
Cardiac arrest, CPR, diarrhea, pulseless electrical activity, ventricular asystole, asthma

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

Hypersensitivity to belladonna alkaloids, closed-angle glaucoma, GI obstructions, myasthenia gravis, thyrotoxicosis, ulcerative colitis, prostatic hypertrophy, tachycardia/tachydysrhythmias, asthma, acute hemorrhage, severe hepatic disease, myocardial ischemia, paralytic ileus

Precautions:
Pregnancy (C), breastfeeding, children <6 yr, geriatric patients, renal disease, CHF, hyperthyroidism, COPD, hypertension, intraabdominal infection, Down syndrome, spastic paralysis, gastric ulcer

DOSAGE AND ROUTES
Calculator
Bradycardia/bradydysrhythmia

• Adult: IV BOL
0.5-1 mg given q3-5min, max 3 mg

• Child: IV BOL
0.01 mg/kg up to 0.4 mg or 0.3 mg/m
2
; may repeat q4-6hr; min dose 0.1 mg to avoid paradoxical reaction, max single dose 0.5 mg

Organophosphate poisoning

• Adult and child: IM/IV
1-2 mg hourly until muscarinic symptoms disappear; may need 6 mg every hr

• Adult and child >90 lb, usually >10 yr: AtroPen
2 mg

• Child 40-90 lb, usually 4-10 yr: AtroPen
1 mg

• Child 15-40 lb: AtroPen
0.5 mg

• Infant <15 lb: IM/IV
0.05 mg/kg q5-20min as needed

Presurgery

• Adult and child >20 kg: SUBCUT/IM/IV
0.4-0.6 mg 30-60 min before anesthesia

• Child <20 kg: IM/SUBCUT
0.01 mg/kg up to 0.4 mg 1/2-1 hr preop, max 0.6 mg/dose

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