Biopharmaceutics Flashcards

1
Q

Define absolute bioavailability.

A

Fraction of a drug that enters the systemic circulation.

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2
Q

What are the benefits of injectables?

A

Rapid response
Patient may be unconscious
Drug cannot be removed in vomiting
Good where drugs have limited oral bioavailability

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3
Q

Which layer of the skin is the most impermeable and hardest to penetrate?

A

Stratum corneum

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4
Q

What is the dermis?

A

Thick layer of tissue below the skin that is perfused by capillaries from deeper layer of arteries/veins in the hypodermis

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5
Q

What is the stratum corneum?

A

Outer layer of dead cellular material

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6
Q

What is the general transit time of the GIT?

A

12-36 hours

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7
Q

What are the two sites of first pass metabolism?

A

Liver

Intestinal wall

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8
Q

Describe the features of the stomach leading to minimal absorption.

A

Tight junctions between cells limit paracellular transport

Epithelial surface is smooth with low surface area

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9
Q

Describe the features of the small intestine leading to maximal absorption.

A

Transit time is 3-4 hours
Large surface area
Highly perfused with 25% of cardiac output

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10
Q

What is the splanchnic circulation?

A

Intestinal veins flow into portal vein

Blood rich in materials is filtered through hepatic sinusoids

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11
Q

What is the transit time of the colon?

A

2-48 hours depending on frequency of defication

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12
Q

Is there anything that affects transit time of the small intestine?

A

Independent of fed/fasted state

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13
Q

What is the volume of the stomach?

A

50mL fasted

>1000mL fed

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14
Q

What properties of neonatal GIT affects drug absorption/bioavailability?

A

Reduced acid secretion may increase bioavailability of acid labile drugs and increase solubility of acidic drugs

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15
Q

List the age ranges of paediatrics.

A

Neonate 0-27 days
Infant 1-23 months
Child 2-11 years
Adolescent 12-18 years

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16
Q

How does the expression of metabolising enzymes in the gut wall differ in paediatrics?

A

CYP3A expressed in 50% of children under 6 months

17
Q

How does the expression of metabolising enzymes in the liver differ in paediatrics?

A

CYPs generally present from birth, reaching adult levels by 2-5 years
UGTs reach adult levels anytime from 2 years

18
Q

What are the physiological changes that occur in children that can alter absorption and pharmacokinetics?

A
  • saliva production
  • gastric pH and emptying rate
  • intestinal transit, SA and motility
  • drug metabolising enzymes
  • drug efflux transporters
19
Q

What is the general trend of pH along GIT as you get older?

A

pH decreases

20
Q

What effect does transit time have on paediatric formulations?

A

Irregular intestinal motility leads to variable transit times which can be a problem for controlled release formulations

21
Q

How is metabolism affected in paediatric patients?

A

Children have a larger liver size and hepatic blood flow per body weight so there is more 1st pass metabolism and increased clearance

22
Q

What is formulation bridging?

A

Assessing the rate and extent of absorption from one formulation vs. another