Upstate Health magazine, spring 2017

Page 15

When good drugs have bad effects

FROM OUR EXPERTS

LESSONS FROM UPSTATE

Seniors susceptible to medication interactions BY AMBER SMITH

AN 83-YEAR-OLD WOMAN arrived at the hospital emergency department with a loss of energy, low blood pressure and slowed heart rate. While myriad medical problems could cause such symptoms, ultimately hers came from an adverse drug event, a problem that is not uncommon among senior citizens. Adverse drug events can happen when someone receives the wrong drug, or the right drug in the wrong dosage, or when a drug is administered incorrectly. Even the correct drug in the correct dose could cause potentially deadly problems if a person has a change in his or her ability to clear the drug. e risk for adverse drug events rises with a person’s age, the number of health problems they have and the number of medications they take. e risk is greater in those with low body mass or impaired kidney function and in those with visual problems or cognitive impairment that makes it difficult to take medicines correctly. e woman’s doctor had recently doubled the dose of her blood pressure medicine, metoprolol, and switched her heart medicines from amlodipine to diltiazem. She was also taking digoxin, another heart medicine. She had diabetes, kidney insufficiency and a history of an irregular heart

rhythm called atrial fibrillation. e diltiazem clashed with the digoxin, and her body reacted to the increased dosage of metoprolol, the Upstate New York Poison Center staff wrote in the Toxicology letter, produced quarterly by the New York State Poison Centers. e woman got worse — lapsing into unconsciousness and requiring a breathing tube — before she got better. e whole episode may have been avoided, wrote toxicologist Christine Stork, PharmD, Michael Holland, MD, and Benjamin Craxton, a fourth-year medical student at Upstate. ey describe a vicious cycle. When the woman’s blood pressure dropped, so did the blood flow to her organs. at exacerbated her kidney problems and impacted the absorption and clearance of the drugs she took. As they accumulated in her system, so did their effects, eventually landing her in the hospital. Craxton, Holland and Stork suggested that a more gradual increase in her blood pressure medicine, with an attempt to reduce the number of her prescription heart medications, could help avoid future adverse drug events.●

5 reasons drugs work differently in seniors lA

person’s percentage of body fat increases with age, and more body fat can mean an increase in the duration of action for fat-soluble drugs, such as the antidepressant amitriptyline and the antianxiety drug diazepam.

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lose muscle mass as we age. at leaves our bodies with less space to distribute certain medications that circulate to lean tissue, including caffeine, the pain reliever acetaminophen and the blood pressure medicine digoxin. erefore, the drugs may end up in a higher concentration than intended.

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blood changes, with levels of the protein albumin declining. is could lead to decreased drug-protein binding and result in higher-than-desired active drug levels in the blood.

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of the liver’s ability to process drugs decreases with age. So, depending on how they are metabolized, some medications – including the blood thinner warfarin and the anti-seizure medicine phenytoin – are likely to have a longer therapeutic duration in older people than in young.

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people have kidneys whose filtering ability declines with age, although up to a third of elderly patients have kidneys that function just the same as in their younger days. Toxicologists recommend assuming that elderly patients have reduced kidney function and using extra care when prescribing drugs that are processed in the kidneys, including the heart medicine digoxin, the antacid cimetidine and opioid painkillers. ●

Source: Article by toxicologist Christine Stork, PharmD, Michael Holland, MD, and Benjamin Craxton, a fourth-year medical student at Upstate, in the Toxicology letter, October 2016.

spring 2017 l upstate.edu

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