1.3 Contraindications for pharmacy technicians

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    Contraindications are adverse effects of a medication when taken with something else. These can be as minor as a small rash for a day or two, or extremely severe and life-threatening

    “Something else” can be a pre-existing condition, another medication, supplement, or food; any reason a medication or treatment should not be administered

    Contraindications are not isolated side effects of any one medication, though having an allergy (pre-existing condition) to a medication can be

    As a pharmacy technician, it is your responsibility to understand general contraindications, allergic reactions, and side effects to best serve the patient in a hospital pharmacy or customer in a community pharmacy

    You will see more examples of each in retail than in a hospital setting. In retail, the customer controls their diet, supplementation, and medication times whereas a hospital controls most (if not all) of these things

    In retail, the technician often sees the prescription (RX) before the pharmacist so they input the RX before the pharmacist reviews and approves it. Catching mistakes on an RX before they reach the pharmacist makes for a proactive and successful technician.

    Be mindful of the differences between an allergic reaction, side effect, and contraindication

    An allergic reaction will occur when the immune system overreacts to a substance—in minor cases, sneezing during the high pollen volume during springtime. In severe cases, anaphylaxis causes respiratory collapse and potentially death.

    A side effect is an effect of a medication that goes beyond the desired bodily response. It can be minor such as a small rash or severe with permanent internal damage

    40% of the PTCB exam covers medications, and 2 of the 10 topics in this category are side effects, reactions, and contraindications.

    The exam will most likely ask at least 2 questions about these topics, though a thorough understanding of each will translate into a better understanding as a technician helping patients

    There are thousands of potential contraindications, most of which you probably will not see on your exam. Listed below are the questions most likely to be asked about on your exam…

    As a general rule of thumb, you shouldn’t drink any alcohol while taking any medications

    Grapefruit and Statins

    Statin refers to cholesterol medications like Atorvastatin (Lipitor) or Simvastatin (Zocor)

    The juice in grapefruit decreases the enzymes needed to metabolize statins, resulting in potential muscle pains and aches

    Dairy Products

    Dairy products contain several multivalent ions (Al3+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Zn2+) which bind to or interfere with the drug. The drug is not fully absorbed due to it’s ionic interactions

    Levothyroxine, tetracyclines, antibiotics, bisphosphonates, and fluoroquinolones should not be taken with dairy

    Greens and Warfarin

    Warfarin has a narrow therapeutic window, meaning dosing needs to be near-perfect to have the right effect. It is used to prevent blood clots in at-risk patients

    Green, leafy vegetables (ex: kale) are high in vitamin K. Vitamin K aids clotting, contradicting the function of Warfarin.

    Tyramine and MAO Inhibitors

    Tyramine is found in fermented foods, cheeses, soy sauce, alcohol (beer), and cured meats.

    MAO inhibitors increase neurotransmitters like dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine in the brain. Mixing with tyramine risks a hypertensive crisis (critically high blood pressure)

    Potentiation (synergy) refers to when 2 drugs with similar effects are taken together resulting in a more powerful result than when taken alone

    Antagonism refers to drugs that negate or reduce the effect of another drug when taken together

    Antiplatelets, Anticoagulants, and NSAIDS

    Antiplatelets (Aspirin, Clopidogrel), anticoagulants (Warfarin, Heparin), and NSAIDs (Ibuprofen, Meloxicam) all increase the risk of bleeding in patients

    By taking any combination of these medications clotting and bleeding issues may arise

    Aminoglycosides and Loop Diuretics

    Aminoglycosides (Gentamycin, Tobramycin) increase permeability in the cell membrane of the inner ear causing ototoxicity (inner ear damage)

    Kidney damage is also a side effect of aminoglycosides which is increased when taken with loop diuretics

    ACE Inhibitors and Potassium-Increasers

    ACE inhibitors (Ramipril, Lisinopril) lower blood pressure but tend to increase potassium (K) levels

    Pairing this with a potassium-increasing medication (supplements, Trimethoprim) can cause hyperkalemia in patients

    Beta-blockers and Calcium Channel Blockers

    Beta-blockers (Carvedilol, Metoprolol) slow heart rate by blocking adrenaline and norepinephrine

    Calcium Channel Blockers (Amlodipine, Verapamil) block calcium from entering the heart, relaxing blood vessels and lowering blood pressure

    Taking both slows heart rate significantly risking bradycardia and heart failure

    Nitrates and PDE5 Inhibitors

    PDE5 inhibitors include Sildenafil and Tadalafil, which have hypotensive effects

    Nitrates such as Nitroglycerin or Isosorbide Mononitrate also cause hypotension

    Taking both medications at the same time could result in dangerously low blood pressure for the patient (bradycardia)

    Warfarin and Broad Spectrum Antibiotics

    Broad-spectrum antibiotics (cephalosporins, penicillin) can increase the risk of bleeding by decreasing vitamin K production

    Warfarin, which prevents clotting, paired with these antibiotics puts the patient at risk of fatal bleeding

    Antihistamines and Benzodiazapines, SSRI, and Antipsychotics

    Antihistamines (Benadryl, Zyrtec) have a sedative effect

    Benzodiazepines, SSRIs, and Antipsychotics can escalate this effect

    Clopidogrel and Omeprazole

    Proton pump inhibitors (Omeprazole) combined with antiplatelet medications (clopidogrel) contradict the anti-clotting effects

    Macrolides and Statins

    Macrolides are antibiotics (clarithromycin) that inhibit Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes

    CYP enzymes break down statin medications, and taking the two together increases the risk of side effects

    Corticosteroids and NSAIDs

    NSAIDs increase the risk of bleeding as well as ulcers and gastrointestinal bleeding

    When taken with corticosteroids, these risks are elevated

    Phyentoin and Estrogen, Warfarin, Progestogens

    Phyentoin treats seizures, initiates CYP enzyme function, and metabolizes toxins.

    This enzyme also reduces the concentration of other medications (Estrogen, Warfarin, and Progestogens) in plasma which decreases their effect

    Sulfonylurea, Metformin, and Thiazolidinediones

    All three medications are used to lower blood sugar and may cause hypoglycemia

    When taken together, blood sugar levels can get dangerously low without proper supervision

    Ritonavir and Protease Inhibitors

    Ritonavir blocks CYP enzymes which break down medications like Protease Inhibitors

    This means there is more medication in the body, available for use. Dosing Protease Inhibitors is lower when the patient is also on Ritonavir

    St. John’s Wort and… Everything

    St. John’s Wort has historically been used as a natural solution to ailments including depression, insomnia, and wound healing.

    However, it has contraindications with almost all medications to some degree.

    Drug-Laboratory

    Certain medications can distort otherwise baseline lab tests in patients

    Some can spike blood pressure or blood glucose, which can skew the diagnosis following the lab tests

    Drug-Disease

    Some medications have more profound effects on those with pre-existing conditions

    For instance, a prediabetic patient should avoid taking a medication that may spike their blood sugar

    • Bradycardia: Heart rate is slower than normal (below 60 to 100 beats per minute). While this is normal in some healthy athletes, it can cause dizziness, fainting, and chest pain among other unwanted symptoms.
    • Hyperkalemia: Potassium (K+), essential for nerve and muscle function, that is too high in the blood. Severe cases result in weakness and cardiac arrhythmias
    • Hypertension: High blood pressure; higher than 140/90 mmHg
    • Hypotension: Low blood pressure; lower than 90/60 mmHg
    • Loop Diuretics: Medications to treat fluid overload conditions
    • Tachycardia: Heart rate is higher than normal (above 60 to 100 beats per minute)

    Sources