E1 L4: Oral Dosing Flashcards

1
Q

3 routes of admin

A

IV bolus
Iv infusion
Extravascular

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2
Q

Peak concentration at CP0
Measure of drug in the veins

A

IV bolus

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3
Q

Drug accumulates in the body until it reaches a plateau

A

IV infusion

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4
Q

Outside of the vasculature
Anywhere outside of vein
oral absorption
Intransal, patch

A

Extravascular

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5
Q

Why extravascular graph looks different

A

All of the drug is going into GI tract but that is not where we measure - measure in blood - some is lost in transit

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6
Q

CMax points for IV bolus, IV infusion and Extravascular

A

IVB - C0
IV I - plateau
Ex: peak

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7
Q

Tmax points for IV bolus, IV infusion and Extravascular

A

IV B - 0
IV infusion - (where plateau ends
Ex: Where peak stops

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8
Q

AUC: bigger the area…

A

Greater exposure to drug over time

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9
Q

Advantage of oral drug admin

A

Ease of admin

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10
Q

Disadvantages of oral drug admin

A

Source/variability of response
Takes time for drug to enter systemic circulation following admin
Some drug may be lost during the absorption process

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11
Q

Two types of oral drug products

A

Immediate release and modified release

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12
Q

Immediate release products

A

tablets and capsules (most common)
Liquids: syrups, elixirs, suspensions, and emulsions

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13
Q

Modified release products:

A

ER:
controlled release - approximates zero order release
Constant drug release over time
Sustained-release: maintains drug release but not at a constant rate
Delayed Release:
common examples is enteric-coated aspirin

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14
Q

Oral drug formulations

A

Immediate release
Sustained release
Controlled release
Delayed release

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15
Q

If the same dose is given in three different formulations, will they all have the same AUC

A

yes

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16
Q

Comparison of oral admin with IV admin

A

Absorption delays the magnitude of the peak compared with that seen following an equal IV bolus dose

17
Q

IV bolus is - order elimination

A

1st order

18
Q

Iv infusion is - order elimination

A

0 order

19
Q

Oral admin is - order of elimination

A

First order (amount in absorption compartment changes over time)

20
Q

Absorption occurring faster than elimination =

A

Net concentration

21
Q

Ka * Abs > kel * A

A

Absorption phase

22
Q

Ka * Aabs = Kel * A

A

Cmax

23
Q

Ka * Aabs < Kel *A

A

Post absorption phase

24
Q

T/F: if Ka < kel, absorption rate limits elimination

A

True
Rate of absorption is controlling rate of elimination of drug

25
Q

Only way to eliminate faster

A

Increase Ka (flip-flop kinetics)

26
Q

tlag def

A

Absorption of a drug after a single oral dose may not start immediately - can be anywhere from minutes to hours

27
Q

Complexities that alter tlag:

A

Disintegration/dissolution
GI motility
Blood flow
Drug transport

28
Q

Why is cmax lower for oral dose?

A

Loss of drug during absoprtion

29
Q

Fraction of drug absorbed (F)

A

Portion of dose administered that reaches systemic circulation

30
Q

Factors that can affect F

A

Dissolution
Gut wall permeation
Active transport
Metabolism
Biliary excretion

31
Q

FDA definition of bioavailability

A

“The rate and extent to which the active ingredient or active moiety is absorbed from a drug and becomes available at the site of action

32
Q

F = Bioavailability

A

NO - NOT a measure of the rate of absorption (only extent)

33
Q

Fraction of drug absorbed equation (absolute bioavailability)

A

F =(AUC oral)/(Dose oral)/ (AUC IV)/ (Dose IV)