2. Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics Flashcards

1
Q

Phases in drug-body interactions

A

Absorption
Clinical effect
Metabolism
Excretion

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2
Q

Routes of drug administration and examples (2)

A

Enteral (via gut - oral)

Parenteral (IV, IM, SC, TD, inhalation)

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3
Q

Advantages of oral drug administration

A

Socially acceptable

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4
Q

Disadvantages of oral drug administration (4)

A

Slow onset
Variable absorption
First-pass metabolism
Least reliable

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5
Q

Factors accepting oral absorption (5)

A
Lipid solubility
Drug formulation
GI motility
Interactions with other substances in the gut
GIT disease
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6
Q

Definition and effect of first-pass metabolism (2)

A

Orally administered drugs can reach systemic circulation after passing through the liver once
Alters drug concentration

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7
Q

Types of liver metabolism, effect and example (2)

A

Drug inactivation - more required orally for desired effect, GTN
Drug activation - activates inactive form. Acyclovir

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8
Q

Advantages of parenteral drug administration (2)

A

Predictable plasma levels (when administered)

No first-pass metabolism

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9
Q

Disadvantages of parenteral drug administration (3)

A

More severe allergic reaction
Access difficulties/self-medication
Higher drug costs

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10
Q

Definition of bioavailability

A

Proportion of ingested drug available for clinical effect

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11
Q

Bioavailability is modified by (4)

A

Dosage form
Destruction in the gut
Poor absorption
First-pass metabolism

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12
Q

Explanation of volume of distribution

A

How much of the body the drug is diluted in (different compartments)

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13
Q

Drug distribution is affected by (2)

A

Lipid binding - slow release from accumulation

Drug binding to plasma proteins (bound drug is inactive)

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14
Q

Definition of drug metabolism

A

Preparing drug for elimination from the body

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15
Q

Action and definitions of drug metabolism (2)

A

Phase 1 reactions - inactivates drugs

Phase 2 reactions - prepares for removal/removes from body

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16
Q

Types of phase 1 reactions (3)

A

Oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis

17
Q

Types of phase 2 reactions

A

Conjugation - glucuronidation, sulfanation, methylation, acetylation, glutathione

18
Q

Methods of drug excretion 4)

A

Renal (urine) - via RAAS
Liver (bile)
Lungs (gas exchange)
Others (Sweat, saliva)

19
Q

Excretion disorders (2) and examples (2)

A

Renal disease - chronic renal failure

Liver disease - liver failure

20
Q

Drug distribution compartment definitions (2)

A

Single compartment model - drug behaves as if evenly distributed throughout body
Two-compartment model - drug behaves as if in equilibrium with different body tissues

21
Q

Pharmacokinetics involves (2)

A

Drug clearance

Repeated drug dosing

22
Q

What does drug clearance involve (2)

A

Plasma half-life (t0.5)

First order kinetics/zero order kinetics

23
Q
First order kinetics (4):
Active/passive
Elimination vs concentration
Graph
Plasma half life
A

Drug elimination/absorption is passive diffusion
Drug elimination is proportional to drug concentration
Logarithmic graph of elimination is a straight line
Plasma half-life is constant

24
Q

Zero order kinetics (3):
Active/passive
Elimination vs concentration
Graph

A

Drug elimination is active and can be saturated by very high drug concentrations
Max. rate of elimination is constant regardless of concentration
Linear graph of drug elimination (constant amount eliminated per unit time)

25
Q

Definition of drug accumulation

A

How the plasma concentration builds if repeated doses of a drug are given

26
Q

Drug scheduling issues (2)

A

Too frequent - plasma levels may become toxic

Too infrequent - sub-therapeutic plasma levels and no clinical effect