Pharmacokinetics & Drug Metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

What is the journey of a drug through the body?

A

A ADME V(R)

Administration
Absorption
Distribution
Metabolism
Excretion
Voided (removal)
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2
Q

What are the positives and negatives of IV administration of drugs?

A

Positive - Very rapid onset of action. If we want systemic exposure very quickly IV is the way to go.
Negative - Invasive and requires training

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3
Q

Why is intraperitoneal administration of drugs not very common?

A

This is because the peritoneal cavity has a very rich blood supply so you can get a drug through that blood supply

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4
Q

Define systemic, local, enteral and parenteral

A

Systemic - where the entire organism is exposed to the drug
Local - restricted to one area
Enteral - via the GI tract
Parenteral - everything but the GI tract

Enteral and parenteral are routes of administration

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5
Q

Which route of administration is easiest to achieve?

A

Enteral - parenteral requires more skill

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6
Q

List the routes of administration

A

Dermal, subcutanous, intravenous, intramuscular, inhalation, ingestion, intraperitoneal

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7
Q

In terms of an enteral route of administration describe the movement of a drug when ingested

A

The drug enters the GI tract where it is absorbed and taken to the liver via the hepatic portal system. From the liver it then enters the systemic circulation

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8
Q

How do drug molecules move around the body?

A

Bulk Flow Transfer - bloodstream

Diffusion Transfer - short distances molecule by molecule

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9
Q

What kind of environment do drugs have to traverse?

A

Aqueous and Lipid environments

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10
Q

What are compartments and barriers?

A

Compartments - Aqueous e.g Blood, lymph, extra-cellular fluid, intra-cellular fluid
Barrier - Lipid e.g Cell membanes

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11
Q

In what state do drugs exist in?

A

Most drugs are either weak acids or weak bases. Therefore they exist in their non-ionised (non-polar) and ionised (polar) forms - the ratio of ionised to non-ionised forms depends on the pH and pKa of the molecules

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12
Q

What is the pKa of a drug?

A

The H+ concentration/pH at which 50% of the drug exists in its ionised polar form.

IMPORTANT to understanding pH partition hypothesis

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13
Q

Explain the pH partition hypothesis

A

See Notes

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14
Q

What does the ratio of ionised to non-ionised forms of a drug depend on?

A

It depends on the pH of the environment and the pKa of the drug

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15
Q

What is ion trapping?

A

Once the drug goes to the liver and into the systemic circulation, any ionised drug becomes trapped in an aqueous environment. Lipid barrier that prevents absorption

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16
Q

What is the pH of the stomach and the pKa of Asprin? What does that mean in terms of the pH partition hypothesis?

A

pH 1
pKa 3.4
See notes

17
Q

What are the factor influencing drug distribution?

A

Regional blood flow
Extracellular binding (PPB)
Capillary permeability
Localisation in tissues

18
Q

What percentage of acidic drugs tend to be bound to plasma proteins?

A

50-80% - bound to albumin (can bind to ionised and non-ionised forms of the drug)

19
Q

What type of environment is fat?

A

Lipophilic environment because it isn’t highly perfused - drugs that are lipophilic will localise in fatty tissue (brain + testes)

20
Q

What are the two major routes of excretion?

A

Kidney - responsible for the elimination of most drugs (most drugs are made water soluble)
Liver - some drugs are concentrated in the bile and secreted into the intestines

21
Q

What kind of drugs are excreted by the liver?

A

Large molecular weight drugs

22
Q

What is the main method of the excretion of drugs from the kidneys?

A

Secretion not ultrafiltration

23
Q

What happens at the glomerulus, proximal tubule, proximal and distal tubules?

A

Glomerulus - Drug-protein complexes are NOT filtered
Proximal tubule - Active secretion of acid and bases
Proximal and distal tubule - Lipid soluble drugs are reabsorbed

24
Q

Why are lipid soluble drugs reabsorbed?

A

Urine is an aqueous environment - How does lipid material change pH. Lipid soluble means it will be reabsorbed

25
Q

Why might IV sodium bicarbonate increase asprin excretion?

A

CHECK notes - ask question to lecturer

26
Q

Describe the excretion by the liver

A

See notes

27
Q

What leads to drug persistence?

A

Enterohepatic cycling and biliary excretion

28
Q

What pharmacokinetic characteristics can be used to predict time-course of drug action?

A

Bio availability (linked to absorption)
Apparent volume of distribution (linked to distribution)
Biological half-life (linked to metabolism/excretion)
Clearance (linked to excretion)

29
Q
Define:
Bio availability
Apparent volume of distribution
Biological half-life
Clearance
A

See notes

30
Q

Define first order kinetics

A

The rate of elimination of a drug where the amount of drug decreases at a rate that is proportional to the concentration of drug remaining in the body

31
Q

Draw a graph and label the axis for first order kinetics

A

See diagram

32
Q

How do you calculate volume distribution?

A

The dose divided by the initial concentration of drug in the plasma