Re: common drugs on ccu step down
Common drugs would include: ace inhibitors, beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, direct vasodilators (most common one on our floor is hydralazine), amiodarone, glycosides, nitrates, opioids, electrolyte replacements, insulin and other hypoglycemics, as well as other drugs for their comorbidities.
The most important ones are the cardiac and insulin, imo, those can kill someone easier than say a vicodin; most importantly know how your cardiac meds work, and what parameters you will be assessing the pt for before giving them (which meds affect HR, which affect BP, which affect both); you should also have a general idea of the usual dose ranges but that will come with time. Always look something up if you aren't sure, and when in doubt as a senior nurse (I am constantly asking if I should give or hold something based on what the pt is doing). Also be aware of your pt's rhythm, like, are they having a new onset block, and if so, is the pt on a blocker? The doc may want to decrease the dose, things like that.
If you guys dovasoactive drips on your unit, you will also want to look those up. Those include Nipride, Nitroglycerin, Levophed, Neosynephrine, Dopamine, Dobutamine, just to name the most commonly used. If you are doing vasoactives, I think the important key when you are first starting out is understanding how/why it works and what it affects (HR, BP, etc)
Anyway, hope that helps and good luck to you!
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