Module 4a: Pharmaceutically Active Components Flashcards

1
Q

The study of interactions btwn drug and organism.

A

Pharmacology! :D

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2
Q

The study of how a drug affects the organsim.

A

Pharmacodynamics!

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3
Q

The study of how the organism affects the drug.

A

Pharmacokinetics!

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4
Q

Pharmacodynamics can be affected by: (3)

A
  1. Disease state or disorder
  2. Age
  3. drug-drug interactions (polypharm)
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5
Q

Pharmacodynamics

How do drugs bind to receptors? (4)

A
  1. Intermolecular forces
  2. Covalent bonds
  3. Hydrophobic interactions
  4. Stereospecific interactions (enantiomers)
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6
Q

What are properties of drugs? (3)

A
  1. Affinity (binding)
  2. Efficacy (desired effect)
  3. Potency (compare relative affinity to competing drugs)

*drugs act as ligands that bind to the receptors

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7
Q

Categories of drugs include: (4)

A
  1. Agonist
  2. Antagonist
  3. Competitive
  4. Non-competitive
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8
Q

Pharmacokinetics

A

ADME

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9
Q

What determines the time to maximum concentration at the receptor to produce its peak effect?

A

Absorption rate.

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10
Q

What term describes how much of the drug administered that is actually absorbed?

A

Bioavailability.

*usually talking about oral admin

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11
Q

What are some factors that affect bioavailability?

A
  1. MW of drug
  2. drug formation
  3. drug stability (pH)
  4. 1st pass metab
  5. blood flow
  6. gastric emptying (food slows process)
  7. GI motility
  8. Drug interactions (polypharm?)
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12
Q

Distribution

What affects distribution of the drug throughout the body?

A
  1. blood
  2. TBW
  3. extracellular fluids
  4. lymph fluids
  5. CSF
  6. protein-binding
  7. drug solubility properties
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13
Q

Hydrolysis, REDOX reactions (CYP450s), activating prodrugs are all examples of _____?

A

Metabolism of drugs.

*has potential to form toxic metabolites :(

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14
Q

Kidneys, feces, lungs, sweat glands are all examples of _____?

A

Excretion of drugs.

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15
Q

Drug Development

What % of drugs make it out of clinical testing?

A

~10%
*90% fail

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16
Q

When do most drugs fail clinical trials?

What phase?

A

Discovery.

17
Q

What is the “Lipinski Rule of 5” used for?

A

Tool to describe drug potential for a new chemical entity (NCE) & its bioavailability.

18
Q

If you violate only 1 rule of Lipinski Rule of 5, can this drug be deemed orally bioavailable?

A

NO!

19
Q

What are Lipinski Rule of 5 based upon?

A
  1. H bond donors (amines, alcohols) (no more than 5)
  2. H bond acceptors (F, O, N) (no more than 10)
  3. MW (less than 500g/mol)
  4. Calculated partition coefficient (cLogP 5 or less)
20
Q

If I develop a drug that is half lipophilic & half hydrophilic, is it safe to say it will move across cell membranes well?

A

YES! This is ideal.

*So is a LMW and low cLogP.

21
Q

What functional groups have been linked to increases in toxicity d/t their metabolite production? (5) And what is this called?

A
  1. Aromatic anilines
  2. nitroaromatics
  3. polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  4. aliphatic halides (group 7)
  5. thiophenes (superman ring)

STRUCTURAL ALERTS