Medication Management

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Preoperative Medication Review - Pill Patrol Plan

  • Comprehensive review: All current medications (prescribed, OTC, herbal supplements).
  • Aim: Identify potential risks, prevent adverse drug interactions, optimize perioperative care.
  • Decision framework: Continue, Hold, Modify (📌 CHM) based on drug, surgery, patient factors.
  • Document: Drug name, dose, frequency, last dose time.
  • Focus areas: Anticoagulants, antiplatelets, antidiabetics, antihypertensives, psychotropics, MAOIs.

⭐ A thorough preoperative medication reconciliation, including over-the-counter drugs and herbal supplements, is paramount to prevent adverse drug interactions and surgical complications.

Cardiac & Coagulation Conundrums - Heartbeat & Bleed Brief

  • Cardiac Meds:
    • β-blockers: Continue.

      ⭐ Beta-blockers should generally be continued perioperatively in patients chronically taking them to prevent rebound tachycardia and ischemia, especially in those with known coronary artery disease.

    • ACEi/ARBs, Diuretics: Hold AM surgery (↓BP/volume).
    • Statins, Digoxin, Amiodarone: Continue.
  • Antiplatelets:
    • ASA: Primary prev: Stop 7d. Secondary: Usually continue.
    • P2Y12 inh (Clopi, Tica): Stop 5d. Prasugrel: Stop 7d.
  • Anticoagulants:
    • Warfarin: Stop 5d (INR < 1.5). Bridge if high VTE risk.
    • DOACs: Stop 1-5d (drug/renal/surgery specific).
    • LMWH (therap.): Stop 24h. UFH IV: Stop 4-6h.

Endocrine & CNS Agents - Hormone & Head Harmony

  • Thyroid Meds:
    • Levothyroxine: Continue.
    • Antithyroid (PTU, Methimazole): Continue; ensure euthyroid.
  • Diabetes Agents:
    • Metformin: Hold 24-48h pre-op.
    • Sulfonylureas: Hold AM of surgery.
    • SGLT2-i: Hold 3 days pre-op.
    • Insulin: Basal: 50-75% dose; Prandial: Hold AM. Target BG 140-180 mg/dL.
  • Corticosteroids:

    ⭐ Patients on long-term corticosteroids (e.g., >5 mg prednisone equivalent daily for >3 weeks within the past year) require perioperative stress-dose steroids to prevent adrenal insufficiency.

    • Stress dose: Hydrocortisone 100 mg IV q8h.
  • OCP/HRT: ↑ VTE risk. May hold 4-6 weeks pre-op (high-risk surgery).
  • CNS Agents:
    • AEDs, Antiparkinsonian: Continue (critical).
    • SSRIs/SNRIs/TCAs: Continue.
    • MAOIs: Hold 2 wks pre-op (traditionally); consult.
    • Lithium: Hold 24-72h pre-op; monitor.

Analgesics & Herbals - Ache & Plant Alert

  • Analgesics:
    • NSAIDs (Aspirin, Ibuprofen):
      • Effect: ↑ Bleeding risk.
      • Stop: Aspirin 7-10 days; others 1-3 days.
    • COX-2 Inhibitors (Celecoxib):
      • Effect: Less platelet impact.
      • Stop: 24-48 hours.
    • Opioids:
      • Effect: Respiratory depression, PONV.
      • Manage: Continue chronic use, adjust dose.
  • Herbal Supplements: 📌 The 4 G's (Garlic, Ginger, Ginkgo, Ginseng) ↑ bleeding.

    ⭐ Herbal medications like Ginkgo, Garlic, Ginseng, and Ginger (the 4 G's) significantly increase bleeding risk and should typically be discontinued 1-2 weeks before surgery.

    • General rule: Stop most herbals 1-2 weeks pre-op.
    • Common Herbals & Stoppage:
      HerbalKey Effect(s)Stop (Pre-op)
      Garlic, Ginger↑ Bleeding7 days
      Ginkgo Biloba↑ Bleeding7 days
      Ginseng↑ Bleeding, hypoglycemia7 days
      St. John's WortEnzyme induction (↓ drug effect)5-7 days
      Ephedra↑ BP/HR, arrhythmias24-48 hours
      Kava KavaSedation, ↑ anesthetic effect24-48 hours
      ValerianSedation, withdrawal risk7-14 days

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Aspirin/Clopidogrel: Stop 5-7 days pre-op if high bleed risk; continue if high cardiac risk.
  • Warfarin: Stop 5 days (target INR <1.5); bridge if high TE risk. DOACs: stop 24-72h.
  • Beta-blockers: Continue in chronic users. Avoid new initiation on surgery day.
  • ACEi/ARBs: Hold on surgery morning to prevent hypotension.
  • Oral Hypoglycemics: Hold most on surgery day. Insulin: adjust to half dose long-acting.
  • Herbal Meds: Stop 1-2 weeks pre-surgery (interactions/bleeding).

Practice Questions: Medication Management

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Which of the following drugs does not cause pharmacological adrenalectomy?

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Flashcards: Medication Management

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A patient with poorly controlled DM/HTN would be classified under ASA _____

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A patient with poorly controlled DM/HTN would be classified under ASA _____

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