Diapositiva 1
Download
Report
Transcript Diapositiva 1
Farmacología Cardiovascular
SISTEMA CIRCULATORIO:
FUNCIONES PRINCIPALES
• Transportar y distribuir sustancias
esenciales a los tejidos
• Remover desechos metabólicos
• Ajustar la provisión de oxígeno y
nutrientes en diferentes estados
metabólicos
• Regulación de la temperatura corporal
• Comunicación humoral
Un sistema complicado
Que se puede simplificar
SERIES AND
PARALLEL CIRCUITS
CICLO CARDIACO
Potencial de acción cardíaco
ATRIUM
VENTRICLE
0
mv
mv
0
-80mv
-80mv
SA NODE
mv
0
-80mv
time
Conductacias
del PA cardíaco
Corrientes y PA cardíaco
Fast K closes
Fast K reopens
Slow K opens
("Delayed rectifier")
Del PA al ECG
AV NODE AND AV BLOCKS
FOCUS ON N REGION
NORMA
L
1ST DEGREE
PROLONGUED AV
CONDUCTION TIME
2ND DEGREE
1/2 ATRIAL IMPULSES
CONDUCTED TO VENTRICLES
3RD DEGREE
VAGAL MEDIATION
IN N REGION/COMPLETE
BLOCK
ECG
ENFERMEDAD CARDÍACA
• Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of
death
• Cardiovascular function based on
– Cardiac pumping ability
• Pace-making electrical signals
• Force of contraction
• Height of ventricle discharge pressure
– Integrity of vasculature
• Presence of blockage
• Muscular tone/structural integrity
• Pressure drop needed to move blood to and through capillary
beds
– Blood volume/composition
• Water, electrolyte, iron balances
• Lipid and protein composition
Patologías cardiovasculares que
requieren farmacoterapia
•
•
•
•
Hipertensión
Arritmia
Falla cardíaca
Trastornos de flujo vascular
I. Background to Hypertension Regulation of Blood Pressure
• Arterial blood pressure due to combination of
cardiac output (CO) and total peripheral
resistance (TPR)
• CO – regulated by heart rate and stroke volume
(CO = HR x SV)
• TPR function of
– Viscosity of blood (hematocrit)
– Length of blood vessels
– Blood vessel luminal diameter (especially
precapillary arterioles)
Cardiac Output
• Heart rate
– Function of
• sympathetic, vagal nervous activity
• Neuro-hormonal substances
– 1° angiotensin II
– 2º vasopression (anti-diuretic hormone = ADH)
• Stroke volume
– Function of
• Venous return (function of venous tone [contractile state] and
circulating blood (vascular) volume)
– Venous tone function of sympathetic activity (α1, α2 receptors)
– Vascular volume depends on
» Intake of fluids (thirst)
» Output of fluids (urine, sweat, etc)
» Distribution of fluids (Starling’s law)
• Myocardial contractility (MC proportional to sympathetic tone [β1
receptors])
Characteristics of some adrenoceptors
Tissues
(sympatheticreceptors
nerves)
and effects
α1
α2
constrict
constrict/
dilate
β1
β2
Smooth
muscle
Arteries/
veins
dilate
Skeletal
muscle
dilate
Heart
Rate
(increase)
Force of
contraction
increase
Autonomic Regulation of the Heart
• Heart Rate
– Parasympathetic input via vagus nerve
causes decrease in HR (dominates)
– Sympathetic input to sino-atrial node causes
increase in HR (usually minor)
• Heart contractility
– Increased by sympathetic activity causing
release of epinephrine, norepinephrine from
adrenal gland
Hipertensión
Antihypertensive Classes
• diuretics
• beta blockers
• angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)
inhibitors
• calcium channel blockers
• vasodilators
Alpha1 Blockers
Stimulate alpha1 receptors -> hypertension
Block alpha1 receptors -> hypotension
• doxazosin (Cardura®)
• prazosin (Minipress®)
• terazosin (Hytrin®)
Central Acting Adrenergics
• Stimulate alpha2 receptors
– inhibit alpha1 stimulation
• hypotension
• clonidine (Catapress®)
• methyldopa (Aldomet®)
Peripheral Acting Adrenergics
•
•
•
•
•
reserpine (Serpalan®)
inhibits the release of NE
diminishes NE stores
leads to hypotension
Prominent side effect of depression
– also diminishes seratonin
Adrenergic Side Effects
• Common
– dry mouth, drowsiness, sedation &
constipation
– orthostatic hypotension
• Less common
– headache, sleep disturbances, nausea, rash
& palpitations
Sistema renina-angiotensina
ACE Inhibitors
RAAS
Angiotensin I
.
ACE
Angiotensin II
1. potent vasoconstrictor
- increases BP
2. stimulates Aldosterone
- Na+ & H2O
reabsorbtion
Renin-Angiotensin Aldosterone
System
•
•
•
•
Angiotensin II = vasoconstrictor
Constricts blood vessels & increases BP
Increases SVR or afterload
ACE-I blocks these effects decreasing SVR &
afterload
ACE Inhibitors
• Aldosterone secreted from adrenal glands
cause sodium & water reabsorption
• Increase blood volume
• Increase preload
• ACE-I blocks this and decreases preload
Angiotensin Converting Enzyme
Inhibitors
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
captopril (Capoten®)
enalapril (Vasotec®)
lisinopril (Prinivil® & Zestril®)
quinapril (Accupril®)
ramipril (Altace®)
benazepril (Lotensin®)
fosinopril (Monopril®)
Calcium Channel Blockers
• Used for:
• Angina
• Tachycardias
• Hypertension
Antagonistas de calcio
como vasodilatadores
Calcium Channel Blockers
• diltiazem (Cardizem®)
• verapamil (Calan®, Isoptin®)
• nifedipine (Procardia®, Adalat®)
CCB Site of Action
diltiazem & verapamil
nifedipine
(and other
dihydropyridines)
CCB Action
• diltiazem & verapamil
• decrease automaticity & conduction in SA & AV
nodes
• decrease myocardial contractility
• decreased smooth muscle tone
• decreased PVR
• nifedipine
• decreased smooth muscle tone
• decreased PVR
Side Effects of CCBs
• Cardiovascular
• hypotension, palpitations & tachycardia
• Gastrointestinal
• constipation & nausea
• Other
• rash, flushing & peripheral edema
Diuretics
• Thiazides:
• chlorothiazide (Diuril®) & hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ®,
HydroDIURIL®)
• Loop Diuretics
• furosemide (Lasix®), bumetanide (Bumex®)
• Potassium Sparing Diuretics
• spironolactone (Aldactone®)
Diuretic Site of Action
.
Distal
tubule
proximal
tubule
Collecting
duct
loop of Henle
Mechanism
• Water follows Na+
• 20-25% of all Na+ is reabsorbed into the
blood stream in the loop of Henle
• 5-10% in distal tubule & 3% in collecting
ducts
• If it can not be absorbed it is excreted with the
urine
• Blood volume = preload !
Side Effects of Diuretics
•
•
•
•
•
•
electrolyte losses [Na+ & K+ ]
fluid losses [dehydration]
myalgia
N/V/D
dizziness
hyperglycemia
Vasodilators
•
•
•
•
diazoxide [Hyperstat®]
hydralazine [Apresoline®]
minoxidil [Loniten®]
sodium Nitroprusside [Nipride®]
Mechanism of Vasodilators
• Directly relaxes arteriole smooth muscle
• Decrease SVR = decrease afterload
Nitratos como vasodilatadores
Side Effects of Vasodilators
• hydralazine (Apresoline®)
– Reflex tachycardia
• sodium nitroprusside (Nipride®)
– Cyanide toxicity in renal failure
– CNS toxicity = agitation, hallucinations, etc.
II. Background to Arrhythmia Rhythm of the Heart
• Human heart is fourchambered
• Chambers need to contract
sequentially (atria, then
ventricles) and in synchronicity
• Also need relaxation between
contractions to allow refilling of
chambers
• Above controlled electrically
(Purkinje fibers allow rapid,
organized spread of activation)
Regulation of Heart Rate
– Primarily accomplished by sinoatrial node (SA)
• Located on right atrium
• Receives autonomic input
• When stimulated, SA signals atrial contractile fibers
atria depolarization and contraction (primes
ventricles with blood)
– Depolarization picked up by atrioventricular
node (AV node) depolarizes ventricles
blood discharged to pulmonary artery and
dorsal aorta eventually rest of body
Sequential Discharge of SA and AV nodes
Dysrhythmia Generation
• Abnormal
conduction
• Analogies:
– One way valve
– Buggies stuck in
muddy roads
Antiarrítmicos: conducción cardíaca
Antiarrítmicos: bloqueo de canales de sodio
Warning!
• All antidysrhythmics have arrythmogenic
properties
• In other words, they all can CAUSE
dysrhythmias too!
Class I: Sodium Channel
Blockers
• Decrease Na+ movement in phases 0 and
4
• Decreases rate of propagation
(conduction) via tissue with fast potential
(Purkinje)
– Ignores those with slow potential (SA/AV)
• Indications: ventricular dysrhythmias
Class Ia Agents
• Slow conduction
through ventricles
• Decrease
repolarization rate
– Widen QRS and QT
intervals
• May promote
Torsades des Pointes!
• PDQ:
– procainamide
(Pronestyl®)
– disopyramide
(Norpace®)
– qunidine
– (Quinidex®)
Class Ib Agents
• Slow conduction
through ventricles
• Increase rate of
repolarization
• Reduce automaticity
– Effective for ectopic
foci
• May have other uses
• LTMD:
–
–
–
–
lidocaine (Xylocaine®)
tocainide (Tonocard®)
mexiletine (Mexitil®)
phenytoin (Dilantin®)
Class Ic Agents
• Slow conduction
through ventricles,
atria & conduction
system
• Decrease
repolarization rate
• Decrease contractility
• Rare last chance drug
• flecainide
(Tambocor®)
• propafenone
(Rythmol®)
Class II: Beta Blockers
• Beta1 receptors in heart attached to Ca++
channels
– Gradual Ca++ influx responsible for
automaticity
• Beta1 blockade decreases Ca++ influx
– Effects similar to Class IV (Ca++ channel
blockers)
• Limited # approved for tachycardias
Class II: Beta Blockers
• propranolol (Inderal®)
• acebutolol (Sectral®)
• esmolol (Brevibloc®)
Class III: Potassium Channel
Blockers
•
•
•
•
Decreases K+ efflux during repolarization
Prolongs repolarization
Extends effective refractory period
Prototype: bretyllium tosylate (Bretylol®)
– Initial norepi discharge may cause temporary
hypertension/tachycardia
– Subsequent norepi depletion may cause
hypotension
Class IV: Calcium Channel
Blockers
• Similar effect as ß
blockers
• Decrease SA/AV
automaticity
• Decrease AV conductivity
• Useful in breaking
reentrant circuit
• Prime side effect:
hypotension &
bradycardia
• verapamil (Calan®)
• diltiazem (Cardizem®)
• Note: nifedipine
doesn’t work on heart
III. Background to Congestive Heart Failure
Maintenance of Normal Heart Function
• Normal cardiac output needed to adequately perfuse peripheral
organs
– Provide O2, nutrients, etc
– Remove CO2, metabolic wastes, etc
– Maintain fluid flow from capillaries into interstitium and back into venous
system if flow reduced or pressure increased in venous system
build up of interstitial fluid = edema
• Because CO is a function of
– Heart Rate – determined by pacemaker cells in the sinoatrial node
– Stroke volume – determined by fill rate and contractile force
– Atrial/ventricular/valvular coordination
Any negative change on above can lead to inadequate perfusion and
development of the syndrome of heart failure
FALLA CARDÍACA
CAUSES:
Impairment of electrical activity
Muscle damage
Valvular defects
Cardiomyopathies
Result of drugs or toxins
PROBLEM: Maintaining circulation with a weak pump
( Cardiac output & cardiac reserve; RAP)
SOLUTIONS: Sympathetic tone via baroreceptor reflex
- Heart rate and contractility
-Venoconstriction ( MCP)
-Vasoconstriction ( Arterial BP)
Fluid retention ( MCP)
-Capillary fluid shift
-ADH
-Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
Glicósidos:
Efectos cardíacos
IV. Background to Reduced Vascular Blood
Flow: Blood Vessel Anatomy and Function
•
Arterial blood vessels
– Smooth muscle (slow, steady contraction)
– elastic tissue (stretch on systole, recoil on diastole)
– Contain about 10% of blood volume
– Arterioles have sphincters which regulate 70% of blood pressure
•
Venous blood vessels
– Highly distensible, some contractility
– Contain over 50% of blood volume
•
Capillaries
– Tiny but contain greatest cross-sectional area to allow high exchange rate
– Contain precapillary sphincters to regulate blood flow
– 5% of blood volume
All vasculature under ANS and humeral control
Misc. Agents
• adenosine (Adenocard®)
– Decreases Ca++ influx & increases K+ efflux
via 2nd messenger pathway
• Hyperpolarization of membrane
• Decreased conduction velocity via slow potentials
• No effect on fast potentials
• Profound side effects possible (but shortlived)
Misc. Agents
• Cardiac Glycocides
• digoxin (Lanoxin®)
– Inhibits NaKATP pump
– Increases intracellular Ca++
• via Na+-Ca++ exchange pump
– Increases contractility
– Decreases AV conduction velocity
Fármacos con acción cardíaca
Tratamiento de la angina de pecho (angor)
Tratamiento del infarto agudo de miocardio
Tratamiento del infarto agudo de miocardio