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Nagelhout Exam 5- Local Anesthetics and Autonomic Questions and Well Verified Answers

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Name the 5 ester LAs - ANSWER-Cocaine Procaine Chloroprocaine Tetracaine Benzocaine Name the 6 amide LAs - ANSWER-Lidocaine Prilocaine Ropivacaine Bupivacaine Articaine Mepivacaine What is the general structure of a local anesthetic molecule? (3 things) - ANSWER-1) a lipophilic benzene ring 2) An ester or amide linkage (intermediate chain) 3) A hydrophilic quaternary amine What is an ester vs amide linkage composed of? - ANSWER-Ester: O==C-----O Amide: NH----C==O How are esters metabolized? - ANSWER-catalyzed by plasma and tissue cholinesterase via hydrolysis Is ester metabolism fast or slow? - ANSWER-rapid and occurs throughout the body How are amides metabolized? - ANSWER-in the liver by CYP1A2 and CYP3A4 Is metabolism of amides fast or slow? - ANSWER-slower bc they require transport to the liver Which type of LA has a higher allergy potential? - ANSWER-esters If a patient has an allergy to an ester drug, can they be given a different ester? - ANSWER-No, if patients exhibit an allergy to any ester drug, all other esters should be avoided Is there cross allergy among the amide class? What about between ester and amide agents? - ANSWER-No and no Are esters short or long acting? - ANSWER-shorter acting due to ready metabolism What is the longest acting ester? - ANSWER-Tetracaine Are amides short or long acting? - ANSWER-Longer acting; more lipophilic and protein bound and require transport to the liver for metabolism Which type of LA is more prone to toxicity? - ANSWER-Amides

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Nagelhout Exam 5- Local Anesthetics and
Autonomic Questions and Well Verified Answers

What are the two classes of local anesthetics? - ANSWER-esters and amides

What is an easy way to tell what class a LA is? - ANSWER-Esters have one "i" in their
name and amides have 2 "i"'s
(Tetracaine vs prilocaine)

Name the 5 ester LAs - ANSWER-Cocaine
Procaine
Chloroprocaine
Tetracaine
Benzocaine

Name the 6 amide LAs - ANSWER-Lidocaine
Prilocaine
Ropivacaine
Bupivacaine
Articaine
Mepivacaine

What is the general structure of a local anesthetic molecule? (3 things) - ANSWER-1) a
lipophilic benzene ring
2) An ester or amide linkage (intermediate chain)
3) A hydrophilic quaternary amine

What is an ester vs amide linkage composed of? - ANSWER-Ester: O==C-----O
Amide: NH----C==O

How are esters metabolized? - ANSWER-catalyzed by plasma and tissue
cholinesterase via hydrolysis

Is ester metabolism fast or slow? - ANSWER-rapid and occurs throughout the body

How are amides metabolized? - ANSWER-in the liver by CYP1A2 and CYP3A4

Is metabolism of amides fast or slow? - ANSWER-slower bc they require transport to
the liver

Which type of LA has a higher allergy potential? - ANSWER-esters

If a patient has an allergy to an ester drug, can they be given a different ester? -
ANSWER-No, if patients exhibit an allergy to any ester drug, all other esters should be
avoided

,Is there cross allergy among the amide class? What about between ester and amide
agents? - ANSWER-No and no

Are esters short or long acting? - ANSWER-shorter acting due to ready metabolism

What is the longest acting ester? - ANSWER-Tetracaine

Are amides short or long acting? - ANSWER-Longer acting; more lipophilic and protein
bound and require transport to the liver for metabolism

Which type of LA is more prone to toxicity? - ANSWER-Amides

Absorption of a LA equals ________ - ANSWER-wearing off
(don't want them to be absorbed, you want them to stay locally as long as possible)

LAs have the ability to _______ or not - ANSWER-ionize

What portion of the LA enters the nerve? - ANSWER-the nonionized portion

Nonionized is the same as? - ANSWER-lipid soluble

Once inside the axoplasm, the drug ________ - ANSWER-reequilibrates

What does the ionized fraction of LA do in the axoplasm? - ANSWER-attaches to the
local anesthetic receptor on the inside of the sodium channel

LAs block ________ - ANSWER-sodium channels

Describe the overall process of how a LA works - ANSWER-Outside of the nerve, there
is equilibrium between the ionized and non-ionized portions of the drug. The nonionized
portion passes through the lipid membrane of the nerve, and once inside the axoplasm,
the drug requilibrates and "re-ionizes". The ionized portion attaches to the LA receptor
on the inside of the sodium channel

LAs block _________ in excitable cells, which decreases the likelihood of _________ -
ANSWER-voltage-dependent Na+ channels;
an action potential

The target site of LAs is on the ___________ - ANSWER-cytoplasmic side of the
neuron membrane

Ionized form = - ANSWER-hydrophilic (water-soluble)

Esters are metabolized by________ - ANSWER-plasma cholinesterases

The pKa of a LA is directly proportional to _______ - ANSWER-onset

, The lower the pKa and the closer it is to 7.4, the ________ its onset - ANSWER-faster

What is the exception to the pKa rule of onset? - ANSWER-Chloroprocaine: it has the
fastest onset, but its pKa is 8.7--due to high concentration usually given

What are two of the fastest onset LAs? - ANSWER-Mepivacaine (7.6) and Etidocaine
(7.7)

The lower the pKa, the faster the _______ - ANSWER-onset

The percent of protein binding of a LA correlates to what? - ANSWER-its duration of
action

The higher protein binding drugs have a ______ duration of action - ANSWER-longer

What are some of the long acting LAs? - ANSWER-Bupivacaine (95)
Etidocaine (94)
Ropivacaine (94)

What does the addition of epinephrine do to the onset time of a LA? - ANSWER-
decreases it (except during spinal anesthesia--> slows the onset time)

What does increasing the dose (concentration or volume) do to the onset time of a LA?
- ANSWER-decreases it

What does addition of epinephrine do to the degree of motor blockade of a LA? -
ANSWER-increases it

What does increasing the dose do for the degree of motor blockade of a LA? -
ANSWER-increases it

What does the addition of epinephrine do for the degree of sensory blockade of a LA? -
ANSWER-increases it

What does increasing the dose do for the degree of sensory blockade of a LA? -
ANSWER-increases it

What does addition of epinephrine or increasing the dose do for the duration of a
blockade? - ANSWER-increases it

What does addition of epinephrine or increasing the dose do for the area of blockade? -
ANSWER-increases it

What does increasing the dose do for the peak plasma concentration of a drug? -
ANSWER-increases it
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