Pharmacokinetics 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the blood brain barrier

A

A group of endothelial cells lining the blood vessels in the CNS forming tight junctions impermeable to water soluble molecules - lipid soluble molecules such as caffeine and ethanol can cross easily

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2
Q

What happens to tight junctions during inflammation

A

They become leaky - in meningitis this allows antiobiotics through the blood brain barrier more readily aiding in treatment

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3
Q

What is the chemoreceptor trigger zone

A

Found in the medulla oblongata and its stimulation induces the nausea and vomiting reflex - triggered by certain molecules - Dopaminergic antagonist prevent this response

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4
Q

How does albumin effect distribution of a drug

A

Albumin is a plasma protein that binds many acidic drugs - it carries a charge so prevents the diffusion of the drug across the lipid membrane

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5
Q

How does body fact interact with lipid soluble drugs

A

Act as a store - anaesthetics are highly lipid soluble - individuals with high body fat require increased concentrations to reach the correct amount in neurons

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6
Q

How do bones and teeth affect tetracycline

A

Bind with a high affinity for calcium, should not be used in children for this reason

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7
Q

What processes outline the phase 1 reactions in the liver

A

Catabolic reactions (oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis) often forming a more reactive compound than the initial drug - usually due to the addition of a hydroxyl group - this is necessary as it becomes the target point for the phase two reaction

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8
Q

Give an example drug that has a toxic intermediate compound

A

Paracetamol - under normal dosage, not very much produced.

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9
Q

What processes outline phase 2 reactions in the ;liver

A

Anabolic reaction (synthesis) involving conjugation to produce an inactive product - large groups added to prevent their reabsorption

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10
Q

What are pro-drugs

A

Drugs that become active only after being metabolised - therefore have a slower induction effect - useful for sedative and the controlling of seizures

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11
Q

How is aspirin eliminated from the body

A

Phase 1 - methyl ester group replaced by a hydroxyl group - Phase 2 - hydroxyl group reacts with a sugar group to form glucuronide. This increases the molecular weight so it is unable to cross the plasma membrane or act on its receptors

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12
Q

How many genes are present for P450 enzymes

A

57

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13
Q

What are P450 enzymes

A

Microsomal enzymes found intracellularly that act upon the uncharged drug once it has crossed the plasma membrane

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14
Q

How are P450 enzymes influenced by other drugs and environmental factors

A

Expression is influenced - Brussel sprouts induce P450 expression - increasing alcohol metabolism
Grapefruit juice inhibits P450 expression

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15
Q

How is penicillin excreted

A

Almost completely removed by proximal tubule secretion - and is therefore rapidly eliminated

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16
Q

How is diazepam excreted

A

Extremely lipophilic so is cleared very slowly from the body

17
Q

What is first - pass metabolism

A

Drugs are extracted so effectively from the liver/gut that the amount reaching systemic circulation is considerably less than the amount absorbed.

18
Q

What is T0.5

A

How long it takes for half the initial dose to disappear from the body

19
Q

How are the rate of excretion and drug concentration related

A

They are independent of each other - Rate is determined by metabolism rather than diminishing concentrations so remains constant

20
Q

What are saturation kinetics

A

Some drugs don’t reach a plateau between rate of excretion and absorption - linear relationship between amount of drug and concentration in the plasma

21
Q

What is zero order kinetics

A

No relationship between amount of drug taken and excretion - Alcohol dehydrogenase - metabolism of alcohol can’t keep up with rate of absorption