What are the nursing considerations for pantoprazole?
What are the nursing considerations for pantoprazole?
Patient/Client-Related Instruction
- Advise patient to avoid alcohol and foods that may cause an increase in GI irritation.
- Instruct patient to report bothersome or prolonged side effects, including headache or GI effects (diarrhea, flatulence, belching, abdominal pain).
What should a nurse assess before giving Protonix?
Evaluation
- Monitor patient response to the drug (relief of GI symptoms caused by hyperacidity, healing of erosive GI lesions).
- Monitor for adverse effects (GI effects, CNS changes, dermatological effects, respiratory effects).
- Monitor the effectiveness of comfort and safety measures and compliance with the regimen.
What do you need to verify before administering butorphanol?
Tell your health care providers if:
- You have a history of drug use.
- You are in recovery for an addiction.
- You are taking methadone or another opioid antagonist to combat addiction.
- You have a breathing or lung condition.
- You have liver or kidney disease.
- You have a history of seizures.
- You had a head or brain injury.
What is a contraindication for the administration of butorphanol?
Butorphanol Tartrate Injection is contraindicated in: Patients with significant respiratory depression (see WARNINGS) Patients with acute of severe bronchial asthma in an unmonitored setting or in the absence of resuscitative equipment (see WARNINGS)
What do you monitor with Protonix?
Patients who are prescribed pantoprazole require monitoring for signs and symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux disease and peptic ulcer disease. If symptoms of these conditions arise, an increase in dosage or medication change should merit clinician consideration.
What drugs interact with Protonix?
Pantoprazole decreases stomach acid, so it may change how well these products work. Some affected products include ampicillin, atazanavir, erlotinib, levoketoconazole, nelfinavir, pazopanib, rilpivirine, certain azole antifungals (itraconazole, ketoconazole, posaconazole), among others.
What should you assess before giving Stadol?
Examination and Evaluation
- Monitor signs of GI bleeding, including abdominal pain, vomiting blood, blood in stools, or black, tarry stools.
- Monitor signs of allergic reactions and anaphylaxis, including pulmonary symptoms (laryngeal edema, wheezing, cough, dyspnea) or skin reactions (rash, pruritus, urticaria).
What are the side effects of Stadol?
Common side effects of Stadol (butorphanol) include:
- drowsiness,
- dizziness,
- constipation,
- nausea,
- vomiting,
- loss of appetite,
- dry mouth, or.
- warmth or redness under the skin.
What is the action of Stadol?
Butorphanol blocks pain impulses at specific sites in the brain and spinal cord. The exact mechanism of action is unknown, but is believed to interact with an opiate receptor site in the CNS (probably in or associated with the limbic system).
What medications are contraindicated with pantoprazole?
Pantoprazole is contraindicated in patients with a history of hypersensitivity to the drug itself, components of the formulation, and/or other benzimidazole PPIs, including omeprazole, lansoprazole, rabeprazole, esomeprazole, or dexlansoprazole.
What drugs interact with pantoprazole?
Serious Interactions of pantoprazole include:
- afatinib.
- atazanavir.
- dasatinib.
- delavirdine.
- digoxin.
- edoxaban.
- indinavir.
- itraconazole.