Drug Disposition: Distribution Flashcards

1
Q

(1) Name 4 factors that would affect the distribution of a drug.

A

blood flow
affinity of cells for drug
ability of drug to cross biomembrane
action of liver (enterohepatic cycling)

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2
Q

(2) What is the role of ABC transporters in drug distribution?

A

ATP-binding cassette transporters (ABC) are transmembrane proteins that can actively extrude a wide variety of endogenous and exogenous compounds (ABC transporters have broad and overlapping substrate specificities)

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3
Q

(2) What is notable about the action of P-glycoprotein throughout its various locations?

A

P-glycoprotein transporter is always moving substances out of the body- to bile duct, intestinal lumen, kidney tubule and blood to brain

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4
Q

(3) Explain enterohepatic cycling.

A

bile excreted with conjugated drugs is metabolized by gut bacteria which can cleave off conjugate to reveal parent drug; parent drug can be reabsorbed into portal system (note: decrease in gut flora ie. antibiotic will decrease this process)

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5
Q

(1) Relate drug distribution and the chemical structure of the drug, how are they interrelated?

A

whether the molecule is lipophillic or aqueous will play a role in the transport across membranes and into tissues

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6
Q

(4) Explain the concept of apparent volume of distribution

A

if we know the concentration of drug administered and then we can test the concentration in blood after it has circulated we can measure the apparent volume of distribution

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7
Q

(4) Describe the utility knowing/using the apparent volume of distribution.

A

since the volume of blood in the body is known, the apparent volume of distribution can be compared to estimate the amount of drug that has been absorbed into tissue

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8
Q

(5) Name two drug-binding proteins in plasma. (predominant)

A

albumin (weak acids) and a1-acid glycoprotein (weak bases)(predominant drug binding sites in plasma)

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9
Q

(5) Where are alternate sites of drug binding within the body besides plasma proteins which render them biologically inactive? (4)

A

(drugs concentrate conc. in organ due to active uptake)
adipose tissue accumulates lipid-soluble drugs
bone
liver
kidney

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10
Q

(6) Name 4 blood-organ barriers in the body and what they are composed of (what type of junction).

A

blood-barin (tight junctions between cap. endoth)
blood-thymus (tight junctions protect only cortex)
blood-testis (occluding junctions of Sertoli cells)
blood-ocular (both blood-aqueous and blood-retinal)

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11
Q

(6) Describe how substances enter and exit CSF.

A

(mostly) only lipophillic compounds cross the BBB freely, xenobiotics can exit the CSF through the venous system

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12
Q

(7) Discuss the movement of drugs across the placenta.

A

most drugs which cross the placenta do so by simple diffusion, bind of drugs does not impede their passage across the placenta (placenta is not a physical barrier for drugs)

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