Biopharmaceutics 1 (28/01/19) Flashcards

1
Q

What is the process of tablets or capsules being made to granules or aggregates?

A

Disintegration

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2
Q

What is the process of granules or aggregates being made into fine particles?

A

Deaggregation

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3
Q

What is the Noyes-Whitney equation?

A

dm/dt = (DA(cs-c))/h

dm/dt: rate of dissolution (or change of mass over time)
D: diffusion coefficient
A: Surface area of particle
h: thickness of diffusion layer
cs: saturation concentration in the diffusion layer
c: concentration in the GI fluid

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4
Q

What factors affect the dissolution rate?

A

Surface Area (affects particle size and porosity. increased by wetting agent)

Solubility of diffusion layer (cs) (weak acid solubility increases with increase in pH, Solubility in stomach < solubility in intestine)

drug in solution (c)

Diffusion of drug ( inversely proportional to viscosity)

Thickness of diffusion layet (h) (agigation dependent)

Crystal vs amorphous state (Amorphous will dissolve faster)

Solvates (generally, higher solvation degree, lower solubility)

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5
Q

If absoption does not increase with dissolution (dm/dt) what does this mean?

A

It is NOT the limiting step.

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6
Q

Explain the difference between “drug” and “medicine” and why we need to make the distinction

A

Drug =Active pharmaceutical ingredient (API), pharmacological agent, and/or therapeutic molecule

Medicine = dosage form, formulation, drug delivery system, Drug + excipent

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7
Q

Define Absolute bioavailability

A

fraction of the drug in the dosage form that arrives in the systemic circulation

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8
Q

Why does “available at the site of action” translate to arrives to the systemic circulation?

A

Practical reason – blood can be sampled easily. Most tissues are not accessible for sampling.
Pharmacokinetic theory – Blood is the central compartment from which drug is distributed.
Pharmacokinetic theory – Absorption is the process of drug entering the central compartment by a route of administration.
Pharmaceutics – once the drug is in the central compartment, the formulation is irrelevant; drug is now dissolved in blood plasma. Formulation is only relevant to absorption.

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9
Q

What are the types of administration (ROA)?

A

1) Across epithelial layers (Skin, small intestine, bucal, gastric, rectal, nasal, bronchial)
2) Bypass epithelial layer via injection/parenteral (Intravascular/directly into blood: i/v, intra arterial) (extravascular/into other body tissue, from which drugs absorbed into local capillaries: SC, IM, and IP/intraperitoneal)

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10
Q

Describe transdermal delivery and absorption

A

Absorption rate is low and occurs in capillary bed of dermis, but drug must first penetrate avascular epidermis

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11
Q

What is stratum corneum?

A

Structure of tightly packed dead cells

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12
Q

Advantage of transdermal drug absorption?

A

Long acting (hours to days), and no first pass metabolism

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13
Q

Key features of Gastrointestinal drug absorption

A
  • Large Surface area
  • High permability (due to lipid bilayer, gaps between cells which asbsorbs hydrophillic drugs, and specific carrier systems can be exploited)
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