Drugs 2: Drug Distribution and Excretion Flashcards

1
Q

What does drug distribution refer to/mean?

A

Reversible transfer of a drug between the blood and the extra vascular fluids and tissues of the body (e.g. fat, muscle and brain tissue)

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2
Q

What proteins to drugs often bind to?

A

albumin and alpha 1-glycoprotein (e.g. phenytoin)

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3
Q

Which proteins are biologically active? (bound or unbound)

A

unbound (drugs that float about free)

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4
Q

Is binding to plasma proteins reversible?

A

Yes

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5
Q

What factors can change bound drug concentrations? (5)

A
  • . renal failure
  • hypoalbuminaemia
  • pregnancy
  • saturability of binding
  • other drugs present in system
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6
Q

At what percent does the drug need to be bound to be considered to have a small tissue distribution?

A

90%

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7
Q

What 3 factors need to be considered when looking at a therapeutic range of a drug?

A
  1. volume of distribution
  2. half-life
  3. clearance
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8
Q

What is the definition of volume of distribution?

A

the volume in which the amount of drug would be uniformly distributed to produce the observed blood concentration

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9
Q

What is the link between Vd and drug’s ability to diffuse through membranes?

A

The greater the Vd, the greater the ability of the drug to diffuse through membranes

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10
Q

In, theory what should the Vd be?

A

42L

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11
Q

What is the volume of Vd if it stays in the extracellular fluid but can’t penetrate cells?

A

12L

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12
Q

What is the usual Vd if it’s highly protein bound?

A

3L

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13
Q

What is the definition of clearance? (measured in ml/min)

A

theoretical volume of fluid from which a drug is completely removed over a period of time

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14
Q

What two organs is the clearance/elimination process dependent on?

A
  1. Kidneys (urine flow rate and renal clearance)

2. liver (metabolism and biliary excretion for hepatic clearance)

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15
Q

Wha is the definition of half life?

A

time taken for the drug concentration in the blood to decline to half of the current value

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16
Q

What 2 factors does half life depend on?

A
  1. clearance

2. volume of distribution

17
Q

What is the equation of half-life?

A

t1/2= 0.693Vd/Cl

18
Q

What will prolongation of a drug’s half-life cause?

A

Increase drug toxicity as it will take longer to break down the drug (drug concentration will remain high for longer)

19
Q

What does the formula t1/2= 0.693Vd/Cl, link together? (2)

A
  1. chemical properties of the drug (lipophilicity)

2. ability of the body to metabolise and excrete the drug

20
Q

Drugs need to be given chronically. How many half-lives does a drug need to have for plasma proteins of the drug to stabilise?

A

4-5 half lives

21
Q

What does drug elimination determines?

A

The length of action of the drug

22
Q

What 2 factos make up drug elimination?

A
  1. drug metabolism (usually in liver)

2. drug excretion (usually in kidneys but also in biliary system/gut)

23
Q

What 3 main mechanisms are used in drug excretion in the kidneys?

A
  1. glomerular filtration
  2. passive tubular reabsorption
  3. active tubular secretion
24
Q

How many litres of fluid a day does glomerulus filter?

A

190L

25
Q

Will bound or unbound drugs be filtered by the glomerulus?

A

All unbound drugs (as long as their molecular size, charge and shape aren’t large)

26
Q

What does passive tubular reabsorption involve?

A

Drug moves back through the tubule in the circulation along the concentration gradient.

27
Q

Where does passive tubular reabsorption occur?

A

In the distal tubule and collecting duct

28
Q

What type of drugs are reabsorbed back into the body

A

Un-ionised drugs such as weak acids

29
Q

Where does active tubular secretion occur?

A

In the proximal tubule

30
Q

What molecules does the active tubular secretion excrete/eliminate?

A

Positive and negative ions

31
Q

Where else could drugs be actively or passively excreted?

A

Into the bile (biliary secretion)

32
Q

When drugs are reabsorbed from the bile back into the circulation, what is the process called?

A

Enter-hepatic circulation

33
Q

Once a drug is absorbed in the small intestine, what are the two routes it can take from the liver?

A
  1. move into systemic circulation from the liver

2. become a conjugate in the liver and secreted into bile which is later reabsorbed back into systemic circulation

34
Q

Why does the drug become conjugated before it becomes bile?

A

So it isn’t reabsorbed back in the small intestine

35
Q

What 2 factors affect the volume of distribution specifically?

A

chemical properties of the drug;

  1. lipid solubility
  2. ionisation
36
Q

What are some of the physiological factors which affect drug distribution and elimination in the body? (4)

A
  • age
  • pregnancy
  • disease state
  • other drugs