Introducing Pharmacology
eBook - ePub

Introducing Pharmacology

For Nursing and Healthcare

Roger McFadden

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eBook - ePub

Introducing Pharmacology

For Nursing and Healthcare

Roger McFadden

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About This Book

This third edition of Introducing Pharmacology provides an accessible and engaging introduction to the subject of pharmacology for nursing and healthcare students – and anyone needing to refresh their knowledge of this important area.

The third edition recognises that many nursing and healthcare courses are now requiring students to engage with the subject of pharmacology at a higher level. Accordingly, this edition has been reinforced with more advanced pharmacology that will help these students, but without losing the clarity and accessibility of earlier editions.

This popular text includes:

• Clear explanations of how drugs work in the human body

• The underlying physiology and pathophysiology necessary for an understanding of the action of drugs

• Coverage of the common drug groups that nurses and other healthcare professionals are likely to encounter in practice

• Case-studies, relating pharmacological theory to clinical practice

• An extensive glossary of key terms and definitions

New to this edition:



  • A new 'beyond the basics' feature, providing a deeper explanation of the mechanism of action of key drugs, supporting students studying at a more advanced level


  • A new section covering drugs for the treatment of nausea and labyrinthine disorders


  • An expanded chapter on drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics


  • Enhanced and more detailed illustrations


  • Updated content that reflects latest guidelines and recently licensed drugs

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Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2019
ISBN
9781351001380
Edition
3
Subtopic
Nursing

Part 1
Principles of pharmacology

1 Let’s start at basics: cells and how they work
2 Proteins as targets for drugs
3 A drug’s journey through the body

Chapter 1
Let’s start at basics: cells and how they work

This chapter looks briefly at the structure and function of cells, which are the prime target for most drugs. We then dip our toes into some basic biochemistry because drugs mostly target biochemical processes in cells.

Contents

Introduction
1.1 Levels of organisation: from cells to systems
1.2 A brief introduction to cells
Cells and cell components
1.3 A brief introduction to (basic) biochemistry
Protein and protein synthesis
How cells make proteins
Lipids
Carbohydrates and sugars
Cellular respiration and the production of ATP
References and further recommended reading
Test yourself

Introduction

Pharmacology can be quite daunting to the student approaching the subject for the first time. The main reason for this is that most pharmacological activity takes place at a cellular or biochemical level and relatively few people are really comfortable down among the cells and molecules. This, however, is the level where we need to be, not only to understand the subject of pharmacology but also to understand the literature relating to the subject. This literature consists of not only textbooks on pharmacology but also clinical reference books such as the British National Formulary (BNF) that you will find in daily use in every UK hospital ward and GP surgery. The BNF appears in an updated edition at six-monthly intervals and is published jointly by the British Medical Association and the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of great Britain. Clinical practitioners use this standard reference book on licensed drugs to ensure that the drug they are prescribing is suitable for the patient, that the patient is being prescribed the correct dose and that the drug will not interact with other drugs. However, a look at the contents page of the BNF will quickly convince you that you need to have some understanding of pharmacology just to access and use this publication. Here is a short sample of the section headings relating to various classes of drugs contained in the BNF:
  • Calcium channel blockers
  • Selective beta-2 agonists
  • Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors
  • Alpha-adrenoceptor blocking drugs
  • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
  • H2 receptor antagonists
  • Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors
  • Cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors
If you are already familiar with these terms then you can probably progress quickly to a more advanced pharmacology book. If not, then you will need to learn them – especially if you are going to be involved in the prescribing or administration of drugs to patients. You not only need to be familiar with the terms but you also need to know what the terms mean – which is a fundamental requirement in ensuring patient safety. Nursing and other health professionals who administer drugs to patients are responsible for the safe administration of those drugs. This means that those staff must be familiar with those drugs, how they work in the body, how they may cause side-effects and possibly interact with other drugs. The classes of drugs mentioned above are in fact the clinical names of some of the most common drug groups that include antihypertensives, analgesics, bronchodilators and antidepressants.
One of the key aims of Introducing Pharmacology is to familiarise you with the language of pharmacology, the names of drugs and the terms that you will find on every packet of drugs and in every publication dealing with the clinical use of those drugs. You will need this language not only to study and understand pharmacology but also to discuss drugs and their effects with patients and fellow professionals.

1.1 Levels of organisation: from cells to systems

Drugs are chemicals that are introduced into the human body to treat or prevent disease. Drugs can relieve symptoms such as pain and swelling, resolve problems such as indigestion and anxiety or manage problems such as heart disease. There are hundreds of different types of drugs designed to treat hundreds of disorders and each type of drug works by a unique action of its own. The way that some drugs work is relatively straightforward while others have quite complex actions. Ultimately, however, if we are going to understand how any of these drugs work, we need to transport ourselves to the level at which most drugs work – the cell.
Now, although the basic action of most drugs can be explained at a cellular level, they eventually have an effect on organs and systems that can be observed either by the clinical practitioner or by the patient themselves. This means that to really understand the action of drugs you have to be able to connect their action at cellular level with their effect on organs and systems. Let us illustrate this by looking at some common drugs and drug groups with which you are probably familiar (or at least have heard of) – see Table 1.1. All of these drugs act on specific cells of the body but have an effect above cellular level.
The gap between the target cell and the effect the drug has on the body is highlighted in the table by an arrow and this is largely what pharmacology is about – explaining how a drug that targets a particular cell produces its therapeutic effect on the body. To understand this, you need to appreciate that the body has various levels of organisation.
Table 1.1 Some common drugs, their cellular targets and their effects
DrugTarget cellMechanismTherapeutic effects
Beta-blockersHeart cells
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Prevents an increase in heart rate
Local anaesthetics AnalgesicsNerve cells Immune cells
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Prevents pain in minor surgery Reduces inflammatory pain
AntidepressantsNerve cells
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Relieves depression
StatinsLiver cells
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Reduces blood cholesterol levels
We divide the human body into levels of organisation for much the same reason as we divide a book into sections and chapters – it breaks the whole into manageable sections and helps us to understand the structure better. Figure 1.1 shows a simplified hierarchy of structures, starting with cell chemistry and moving upwards to the whole body. As an example of this hierarchy we have used the circulatory system, but bear in mind that this simplified diagram does not imply that the heart is made up of only one type of tissue. There may be only one heart but it is made up of several different types of tissue and these tissues are made up of their own specialised cell types.
Most drugs interact initially with the first two categories, cell organelles and their components, the chemicals of which they are made. However, the effects of drugs are generally observed on the body as a whole or the organ systems. For example, the anti-angina drug glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) targets the cells of various blood vessels, including those of the heart itself, but the effect observed by the patient is the lessening of their chest pain. Another example is the anti-hypertensive drug nifedipine, which reduces blood pressure by targeting the cell membrane of the muscle cells surrounding blood vessels. Here the effect is on the circulatory system where you will observe a fall in blood pressure.
In Part 2 of Introducing Pharmacology we will be following the stories of most of our major drug groups from their interaction with cells right through to their therapeutic effect on organ systems. You will see that when we take each stage a step at a time, then pharmacology is actually quite a straightforward subject and is nowhere near as daunting as it may at first seem. But first things first – we need to familiarise ourselves with cells and some of the basic biochemistry that takes place in those cells.
Figure 1.1 Levels of organisation within the human body. The hierarchy of organisation of the heart and circulatory system is given as an example.
Figure 1.1 Levels of organisation within the human body. The hierarchy of organisation of the heart and circulatory system is given as an example.

1.2 A brief introduction to cells...

Table of contents