Absorption Flashcards

1
Q

What factors determine given drug’s ability to cross biological membrane

A

size, degree of ionization, concentration gradient, lipid solubility,

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2
Q

Mechanisms drugs cross biological membranes

A

Passive diffusion (aqueous via aquaporins and lipid soluble drugs directly diffusing), Active transport, Endocytosis, Facilitated diffusion

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3
Q

Most important mechanism for drugs to cross biological membranes

A

lipid soluble drugs diffusing across membrane

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4
Q

Enteral Routes

A

Oral and rectal

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5
Q

Parenteral Routes

A

IV, Inhalational, subcutaneous, imtramuscular, transdermal, sublingual, buccal, etc

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6
Q

Oral Route (adv/dis)

A

systemic effects, variable bioavailability, encounters enterohepatic circulation, man manipulate rate of absorption, food delays absorption

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7
Q

Rectal

A

Systemic effects, can use for those who are vomitting, unconscious, post GI surgery, uncooperative, low pts acceptance, variable bioavailability, less efficient metabolism than oral

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8
Q

IV route

A

100% bioavailable, most rapid/direct route, high potential for toxicity, can introduce infectious agents, difficult reversal of effect

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9
Q

IM

A

approach bioavailability of IV, Can use depot forms or oil suspensions for slower/sustained absorption, pain/necrosis if high pH, microbial contamination

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10
Q

Inhalational (systemic)

A

volatile gases; high bioavailability but can be addicting

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11
Q

subcutaneous

A

systemic, generally approaches 100% bioavailability, slower, constant absorption rate, limited dose volume, only for non-irritating drugs

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12
Q

Sublingual

A

systemic, high bioavailability, rapid onset, avoids first pass metabolism, good for lipid soluble/potent drugs

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13
Q

transdermal

A

systemic, avoids first pass metabolism, avoid ADR related to hepatic actions, potential for unexpected accumulation/toxicity, need nonsensitizing/nonirritating yet potent d rug

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14
Q

Local routes

A

Aural, nasal, throat, vaginal, ocular/conjunctival, inhalational

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15
Q

Inhalational (local)

A

(particles) increase local topical effects in lung/lower systemic effect, effects depend on particle size

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16
Q

Bioavailability

A

extent of unchanged drug reaching systemic circulaiton; determined by [AUC (from route)/AUC (
IV)]

17
Q

What form of the weak acid/base drug crosses membranes?

A

unionized form (AH, B)

18
Q

Ion trapping

A

Have two compartments with different pHs separated by membrane –> ionized form of the drug gets trapped on one side of membrane. Total drug concentration greater on side where ionization is greater

19
Q

What kind of solution will trap a weakly acidic drug?

A

weak base

20
Q

Barriers in body with tight junctions

A

GI, Blood brain barrier, placenta, renal tubules

21
Q

Characteristics of drug that can easily cross membranes

A

small, uncharged, high lipid solubility, has large concentration gradient

22
Q

What does plasma protein binding do to a drug

A

Creates protein-drug complex that cannot diffuse/cross membrane; increases half-life, decrease Vd, decrease ability to enter blood brain barrier or distribute to tissue (affects distribution/metabolism/excretion)

23
Q

Protein-binding displacement

A

Give second drug that will bind to plasma protein and cause displacement of first drug

24
Q

When you should be concerned about protein-binding displacement interactions

A

Narrow therapeutic index of displaced drug, displacing drug started in high doses, Vd of displaced drug small, response to drug occurs more rapidly than redistribution

25
Q

Vd

A

volume of distribution–extend to which drug is distrubuted

26
Q

relationship between Cp and Vd

A

inverse; more in plasma means less distributed to tissues

27
Q

Volumes of water compartments in body

A
Plasma/blood - 3-5 L
Extracellular water = 12-15L
Total body water= 42 L
Other compartments (sequestering) = >50 L
28
Q

High Vd

A

less drug in plasma, more in tissue

29
Q

Low Vd

A

more drug in plasma

30
Q

Variation in Vd due to…

A

body size, fat vs lean composition, changes in protein binding

31
Q

relationship between loading dose and Vd

A

LD = CpxVd

32
Q

How to determine effect of dose on Cp

A

Cp = Dose/ Vd

33
Q

Where is drug if Vd= 13

A

drug mostly in extracellular space