1 / 18

Fundamentals of Pharmacology for Veterinary Technicians

Household system: lacks standardization; not accurate for measuring medicine ... Minim = liquid volume of a drop of water from a standard medicine dropper ...

Télécharger la présentation

Fundamentals of Pharmacology for Veterinary Technicians

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    Slide 1:Fundamentals of Pharmacology for Veterinary Technicians

    Chapter 6 Systems of Measurement in Veterinary Pharmacology

    Slide 2:Systems of Measurement

    Household system: lacks standardization; not accurate for measuring medicine Metric system: developed in late 18th century to standardize measures and weights for European countries Units based on factors of 10 Prefixes denote increases or decreases in size of unit Apothecary system: system of liquid units of measure used chiefly by pharmacists

    Slide 3:Metric System

    Units are based on factors of 10 Base units are meter (length), liter (volume), and gram (weight) Prefixes commonly used: Micro- = one millionth of unit = 0.000001 Milli- = one thousandth of unit = 0.001 Centi- = one hundredth of unit = 0.01 Kilo- = one thousand units = 1,000

    Slide 4:Converting Within the Metric System

    Use dimensional analysis (unit calculation) Must know metric equivalents called conversion factors Conversion factors are used to change between units and always have a value of one Cancel units to achieve answer in desired unit of measure Desired unit of measure should be on top of the conversion factor Always validate answer

    Slide 5:Shortcut Method

    Move decimal point appropriate direction based on units Examples: kg to g = move decimal point 3 places to the right g to kg = move decimal point 3 place to the left l to ml = move decimal point 3 places to the right ml to l = move decimal point 3 places to the left

    Slide 6:Remember . . .

    When converting from larger units to smaller units, the quantity gets larger When converting from smaller units to larger units, the quantity gets smaller

    Slide 7:Apothecary System

    System of liquid measure used by pharmacists; also called the common system Derived from the British apothecary system of measures Units in the apothecary system: Minim = liquid volume of a drop of water from a standard medicine dropper 60 minims = 1 fluid dram Grain = basic unit of weight measurement

    Slide 8:Conversions between Metric and Apothecary Systems

    At times, you may need to make conversions between systems Need relationship between two systems to serve as a bridge Bridges are found in Table 6-6

    Slide 9:Temperature Conversions

    In the Fahrenheit system, water freezes at 32 degrees; water boils at 212 degrees In the Celsius system, water freezes at 0 degrees; water boils at 100 degrees Comparison: 212 – 32 = 180 100 – 0 = 100 180 ÷ 100 = 1.8 C = F – 32/ 1.8 F = 1.8C + 32

    Slide 10:Dose Calculations

    Must know correct amount of drug to administer to a patient Must be in same system of measurement Weight conversion factor: 2.2 lb = 1 kg Remember that drugs can be measured in mcg, mg, g, gr, ml, l, units Remember that drugs can be dispensed or administered in tablets, ml, l, capsules

    Slide 11:Solutions

    Solutions are mixtures of substances not chemically combined with each other The dissolving substance of a solution is referred to as the solvent (liquid) The dissolved substance of a solution is referred to as the solute (solid or particles) Substances that form solutions are called miscible Substances that do not form solutions are called immiscible

    Slide 12:Working with Solutions

    The amount of solute dissolved in solvent is known as the concentration Concentrations may be expressed as parts (per some amount), weight per volume, volume per volume, and weight per weight Usually reported out as percents or percent solution Remember that a percent is the parts per the total times 100

    Slide 13:Rules of Thumb When Working with Solutions

    Parts: parts per million means 1 mg of solute in a kg (or l) of solvent (1:1000) Liquid in liquid: the percent concentration is the volume per 100 volumes of the total mixture (1 ml/100 ml) Solids in solids: the percent concentration is the weight per 100 weights of total mixture (60 mg/100 mg) Solids in liquid: the percent concentration is the weight in grams per 100 volume parts in milliliters (dextrose 5% = 5 g/100ml)

    Slide 14:Percent Concentration Calculations

    Pure drugs are substances that are 100% pure Stock solution is a relatively concentrated solution from which more dilute solutions are made Ratio-proportion method: one method of determining the amount of pure drug needed to make a solution Amount of drug/amount of finished solution = % of finished solution/100% (based on a pure drug) Remember that the amount of drug used to prepare a solution is added to the total volume of the solvent

    Slide 15:Another Way to Determine Volume

    Volume concentration method: Vs = volume of the beginning or stock solution Cs = concentration of the beginning or stock solution Vd = volume of the final solution C d = concentration of the final solution Vs x Cs = Vd x Cd

    Slide 16:Drug Concentrations in Percents

    Drug concentrations are sometimes listed in percents Parts per total = parts (in g) per 100 The front of the vial specifies the concentration (for example, 2% lidocaine) Use X g/100 ml to determine dose

    Slide 17:Reconstitution Problems

    Drug is in powder form because it is not stable when suspended in solution Such a drug must be reconstituted (liquid must be added to it) The label should state how much liquid to add Powder may add to the total final volume of liquid being reconstituted Label a reconstituted drug with the date prepared, the concentration, and your initials

    Slide 18:Additional Practice

    Check the book, CD-ROM, and on-line material for calculation problems

More Related