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Introduction to how nutrients and supplements interact with various medications and influence their efficacy and safety.
By mastering this deck, you'll understand how dietary components influence drug action, enabling better management of nutrition-drug interactions in clinical practice to optimize therapy outcomes and minimize adverse effects.
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| # | Front | Back | Hint |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | What is a common nutritional supplement that can decrease the absorption of levothyroxine? | Calcium supplements can bind to levothyroxine in the gastrointestinal tract, reducing its absorption and effectiveness. | Think about minerals that interfere with drug absorption—calcium is a key example. |
| 2 | How can high-fat meals affect the absorption of lipophilic drugs? | High-fat meals can increase the absorption of lipophilic (fat-soluble) drugs by enhancing their solubilization and dissolution, potentially leading to higher plasma concentrations. | Fat-soluble drugs are like 'oil in water'—they need fats to dissolve better. |
| 3 | Which vitamin is known to interact with warfarin, potentially affecting blood clotting? | Vitamin K can antagonize warfarin's anticoagulant effect, leading to decreased efficacy and increased risk of clot formation if intake varies unexpectedly. | Remember: 'K' for clotting factor synthesis—warfarin inhibits vitamin K-dependent clotting factors. |
| 4 | What is the effect of grapefruit juice on certain medications, and which enzyme is primarily involved? | Grapefruit juice inhibits the cytochrome P450 3A4 enzyme in the intestinal wall, leading to increased plasma concentrations of certain drugs like statins, which can enhance toxicity risk. | Think of grapefruit as a 'P450 inhibitor' that can 'amplify' drug levels. |
| 5 | How can excessive intake of iron supplements affect the absorption of certain antibiotics? | Iron supplements can chelate with antibiotics such as tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones, forming insoluble complexes that reduce their absorption and effectiveness. | Chelation is like 'binding'—iron binds to antibiotics, preventing their uptake. |
| 6 | Which dietary factor can accelerate the metabolism of certain drugs by inducing liver enzymes? | Cruciferous vegetables like broccoli and Brussels sprouts contain compounds that induce cytochrome P450 enzymes, potentially increasing the metabolism and decreasing plasma levels of some drugs. | Inducing enzymes speeds up drug clearance—think of 'cooking up' more enzyme activity. |
| 7 | Name a nutrient that can cause hyperkalemia when combined with potassium-sparing diuretics. | Excessive dietary potassium intake can lead to hyperkalemia in patients taking potassium-sparing diuretics like spironolactone. | Potassium intake + potassium-sparing drugs = watch for high potassium levels. |
| 8 | What is the impact of chronic alcohol consumption on drug metabolism? | Chronic alcohol consumption can induce certain liver enzymes, increasing the metabolism of some drugs, which may reduce their effectiveness, or cause liver damage affecting drug clearance. | Alcohol as an enzyme inducer or hepatotoxin—think liver health and drug levels. |
| 9 | How can vitamin C supplements influence the excretion of certain drugs? | High doses of vitamin C can acidify urine, increasing the excretion of weakly basic drugs like amphetamines, potentially reducing their plasma levels. | Urine pH affects drug excretion—acidify or alkalinize urine to alter drug clearance. |
| 10 | Why should patients on anticoagulants avoid sudden changes in dietary vitamin K intake? | Sudden increases or decreases in vitamin K intake can respectively decrease or increase the anticoagulant effect of warfarin, risking clotting or bleeding complications. | Maintain consistent vitamin K intake to keep warfarin effects stable. |
| 11 | What is the role of dietary fiber in drug absorption? | Dietary fiber can bind to certain drugs, such as digoxin or tetracyclines, reducing their absorption and efficacy. | Fiber acts like a sponge—binding drugs and decreasing their uptake. |
| 12 | Which nutrient deficiency can impair the metabolism of certain drugs requiring conjugation in the liver? | Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency can impair conjugation pathways, affecting drug metabolism and detoxification. | Metabolic pathways depend on coenzymes—deficiency can cause trouble in drug processing. |
| 13 | How does alcohol interfere with the pharmacokinetics of acetaminophen (paracetamol)? | Acute alcohol intake induces CYP2E1 enzyme, increasing the formation of toxic metabolites of acetaminophen, raising the risk of hepatotoxicity. | Alcohol activates pathways that produce liver-damaging metabolites. |
| 14 | What is the effect of magnesium-containing antacids on the absorption of tetracycline antibiotics? | Magnesium-containing antacids chelate tetracyclines, significantly reducing their absorption and therapeutic efficacy. | Antacids and tetracyclines both bind to metals—avoid concurrent use. |
| 15 | Why should patients taking levodopa avoid high-protein meals? | High-protein meals compete with levodopa for transport across the gut and blood-brain barrier, decreasing its central nervous system availability and therapeutic effect. | Protein blocks dopamine precursor transport—timing meals can matter. |
| 16 | How can chronic deficiency of folic acid affect drug therapy, especially with methotrexate? | Folic acid deficiency can increase toxicity risk of methotrexate and impair cell regeneration, impacting treatment outcomes. | Folate supports DNA synthesis—important in drugs that target rapidly dividing cells. |
| 17 | What are the potential effects of omega-3 fatty acids on blood clotting when taken with anticoagulants? | Omega-3 fatty acids can exert a mild antiplatelet effect, potentially enhancing the anticoagulant effect and increasing bleeding risk. | Think of omega-3s as 'blood thinners'—use caution with blood thinners. |
| 18 | Which mineral supplement can interfere with the absorption of levodopa, a medication used in Parkinson's disease? | Iron supplements can chelate with levodopa, reducing its absorption and effectiveness. | Cheating with iron? It can 'block' levodopa's entry. |
| 19 | What is the significance of maintaining consistent dietary intake of vitamin K in patients on warfarin therapy? | Consistent vitamin K intake helps maintain stable anticoagulation levels, reducing the risk of bleeding or clotting due to fluctuations. | Vitamin K intake should be steady—avoid sudden changes. |
| 20 | How do probiotics potentially influence drug metabolism or absorption? | Probiotics can alter gut flora, potentially impacting the metabolism of certain drugs or the integrity of the gut lining, which may affect drug absorption. | Gut bacteria influence drug fate—think of probiotics as 'modulators.' |
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