Week 3 Pharmacokinetics Flashcards

1
Q

How can pH of the medium affect the absorption and excretion of a drug?

A

Acidic drugs are better absorbed in acidic mediums and better excreted in basic medium.
Basic drugs are better absorbed in basic medium and better excreted in acidic medium.

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2
Q

On a basic level, which drugs are more easily absorbed?

A

Non-ionized (protonated and non-polar) are more easily absorbed because they can pass through the plasma membrane

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3
Q

The pH of a drug is 3.4, what would you expect this drug’s absorption in the stomach (pH 1.4) and plasma (pH 7.4)?

A

In the stomach most of the drug will be protonated and absorbed.
In the plasma most of the drug will ionized and not absorbed.

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4
Q

What are the two main paths of drug metabolism and excretion?

A

Metabolism: Liver
Excretion: Kidneys

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5
Q

Describe Phase I of drug metabolism in the liver

A

P450 enzyme converts parent drug to more polar daughter drug by two ways:

  1. Unmasking polar group on molecule, or
  2. Inserting polar group into molecule

The isoenzymes Include: CPY2D6, CPY2C9, CPY3A4

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6
Q

Describe Phase II of drug metabolism in the liver

A

Conjugation of subgroups to drugs at the -OH, -SH, and -NH2 sites

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7
Q

What is p-glycoprotein (AKA MDR-1)?

A

P-glycoprotein is a transport protein that transfers drugs to the bile or lumen.

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8
Q

Describe drug-to-drug interaction through absorption.

A
  1. Direct interaction between two drugs
  2. One drug may alter the gastric pH
  3. One drug may decrease p-glycoprotein
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9
Q

Describe drug-to-drug interaction through excretion.

A
  1. Change in renal flow
  2. Inhibited tubular secretion
  3. Altered tubular absorption
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10
Q

What is enzyme induction?

A

The increased expression (transcription or translation) and decreased degradation of P450. Usually as a result of another molecule triggering the event.

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11
Q

What is enzyme inhibition?

A

The increased degradation and decreased expression (transcription or translation) of P450. Usually as a result of another molecule triggering the event.

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12
Q

Inhibition of p-glycoprotein (AKA MDR-1) causes what?

A

Inhibiting p-glycoprotein causes toxic leves of a drug in the system

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13
Q

Explain the zero-order of drug elimination

A

Zero-order drug elimination:

  1. Elimination is constant
  2. Elimination process is saturated
  3. Half-life is INDEPENDENT of drug concentration
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14
Q

Explain the first-order of drug elimination

A

First-order drug elimination:

  1. Elimination is proportional to drug plasma concentration
  2. Half-life is DEPENDENT of drug concentration
  3. Most drugs are eliminated via first-order
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15
Q

What is the area under the curve?

A

A plot of concentration of drug in blood plasma against time

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16
Q

What does the volume of distribution mean?

A

The amount of drug in the body as measured by plasma.

17
Q

What does clearance mean?

A

The ratio of the rate of elimination of a drug to the concentration of the drug in the plasma or blood.

18
Q

What does Cp mean?

A

Plasma drug concentration

19
Q

What is the equation for half-life?

A

t1/2 = (0.693 x Vd) / CL

Where Vd is volume of distribution
CL is clearance

20
Q

What is the equation for dosing rate?

A

dosing rate = CL x Cp

21
Q

What is the equation for loading dose?

A

loading dose = Vd x Cp

22
Q

What does bioavailability mean?

A

A measure of the drug available to the systemic circulation over time after administration

23
Q

What does steady state mean?

A

Steady state refers to the condition where the averaged plasma drug concentration does not change.
The dosing rate equals the rate of elmination

24
Q

How would renal disease affect a drug?

A
  1. Reduces clearance of the drug

2. Has greater potential for re-absorption

25
Q

How would liver disease affect a drug?

A

Liver disease will affect drug metabolism