Stability mechanisms Flashcards

1
Q

What does LogP indicate?

A

How a drug partitions between water and octanol.

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2
Q

Does LogP give any indication of how long it takes to establish an equilibrium?

A

No

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3
Q

What is kinetics?

A

Measures the rate at which the concentration of a reactant or product changes

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4
Q

What are rate laws?

A

Relationships between the rate of reaction, concentration of reactants (and/or products) and the rate constant

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5
Q

How can rate be expressed?

A

rate = k[A]^m [B]^n

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6
Q

Is it easy to measure the initial rate of a reaction?

A

No, it involves small changes in concentration occuring over a short period of time

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7
Q

What is the definition of a zero order reaction?

A

A reaction that proceeds at a constant rate and is independent of the concentration of reactant, A.

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8
Q

What are examples of zero order reactions?

A

Elimination of alcohol

Suspensions of poorly soluble drugs e.g. calpol

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9
Q

What are the units of k for a zero order reaction?

A

mol/l-1/s-1 i.e conc/time-1

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10
Q

What is the definition of a first order reaction?

A

Reaction proceeds at a rate that is dependent on the concentration one reactant. A

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11
Q

What are examples of first order reactions?

A

Most drugs are eliminated this way

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12
Q

What are the units of k for first order reactions?

A

s-1 i.e time-1

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13
Q

What are pseudo first order reactions?

A

Some reactions involve more than one reacting species and still follow first order kinetics

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14
Q

What is an example of a pseudo first order reaction?

A

When one of the reactants is in large excess and its change in concentration during the reaction is negligible e.g. ester hydrolysis - water is in large excess compared to drug

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15
Q

What is the definition of half life?

A

The time it takes for the concentration of the reactant to decrease by half of its original value

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16
Q

What is meant by the stability of pharmaceutical products?

A

The capability of a formulation in a specific container closure system to remain within its physical, chemical, microbiological, therapeutical and toxocological specification throughout its shelf life

17
Q

What is the definition of shelf life?

A

The time during which the product retains the same properties and characteristics it possessed when manufactured

18
Q

What is stability testing used for?

A

Provides evidence as to how the quality of the drug product varies with time.
Establishes shelf life
Determines recommended storage conditions
Determines container closure system suitability

19
Q

What are the routes of chemical degredation of medicines?

A

Hydrolysis - many factors increase risk of this (pH, buffer, solvent, heat, drug conc)
Oxidation
Photolysis
Chelating agents may form unwanted complexes

20
Q

Why is stability testing necessary?

A
Chemical degredation leads to degredation of drug conc in dosage form 
Toxic product may form
Provides assurance to patient
Economic considerations
Legal requiement
21
Q

Apart from microbiological/toxicological tests, what other tests are solid medicines submitted to?

A

Heat
Moisture uptake
Physical stress

22
Q

What is accelerated stability testing?

A

Reflects the need for a rapid evaluation of the kinetics of decomposition. It assess drug stability - uses arrhenius equation for this

23
Q

What is the most common test for accelerated stability testing?

A

Temperature is the most common test - Maxwell Boltzman distribution - increase in temp - increase in probability of collisions

24
Q

How is decomposition related to increase in temperature?

A

Decomposition is increased between 2 and 5 fold for each 10 degree increase in temp

25
Q

What is the Arrhenius equation used for?

A

Used to predict the shelf life of a drug

26
Q

Wha assumptions are made when using the arrhenius equation?

A

The mechanism of decomposition does not change with temperature therefore can extrapolate information (not alwayds true though)

27
Q

How do you determine the shelf life from the arrhenius equation?

A

The shelf life is the time it takes for 90% of the initial amount of drug to remain

28
Q

Apart from microbiological/toxicological tests, what other tests are liquid medicines submitted to?

A

Light (UV)
pH
Oxidation