Exam 1 Flashcards
what is most important concept of an “ideal drug”
effectiveness - does what it’s supposed to do
what is the therapeutic objective for drugs?
maximize benefit, minimize harm
pharmacokinetics definition
body’s impact on the drug; movement of drug through body
components of pharmacokinetics
absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion
where are drugs metabolized?
liver
where are drugs excreted?
kidneys
pharmacodynamics definition
impact of drugs on the body
5 rights of medication administration
right medication, right person, right dose, right time, right route
controlled substances
drugs with potential for abuse
what populations are being tested in preclinical drug trials?
animals and human cells
what populations are being tested in clinical drug trials?
humans
which populations are tested in phases 1, 2 and 3 of clinical trials?
1-healthy
2-people with disease being targeted
3-people in hospital (largest sample size)
what is phase 4 of clinical trials? what is being monitored?
post marketing surveillance; ADRs being monitored
define drug classification of therapeutic
broad definition - ex: hypertensive, antidepressant
define drug classification of pharmacological
mechanism of action - ex: beta blocker, SSRI
what is the difference and concern with generics vs brand drugs?
generics have different INACTIVE ingredients and rate of absorption is affected
name ways drugs can cross membranes into site of action
channels and pores (small), transport systems, direct penetration
which is most common way drugs cross membranes?
direct penetration
cells must have what characteristic to pass through via direct penetration
lipid soluble (b/c of the lipid membrane)
what types of drugs cannot pass via direct penetration?
ions, polar molecules
define absorption of drugs
movement from site to bloodstream
what factors affect absorption
how quickly it dissolves, lipid solubility, blood flow, surface area (increases in these will cause increased absorption)
what is the quickest administration route?
parenteral - IV, SQ, IM! - straight into bloodstream
how does protein binding affect distribution of drugs?
drugs bind to albumin, a large protein molecule in the blood. some drugs have a higher affinity for albumin. albumin is too large to pass through the membranes, so it will decrease the number of drug molecules that will make to the site of action, or be excreted. since albumin has a limited number of binding sites, and can knock other drugs off, there are toxicity concerns