Biopharmaceutics 1 (28/01/19) Flashcards
What is the process of tablets or capsules being made to granules or aggregates?
Disintegration
What is the process of granules or aggregates being made into fine particles?
Deaggregation
What is the Noyes-Whitney equation?
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
What factors affect the dissolution rate?
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)
If absoption does not increase with dissolution (dm/dt) what does this mean?
It is NOT the limiting step.
Explain the difference between “drug” and “medicine” and why we need to make the distinction
Drug =Active pharmaceutical ingredient (API), pharmacological agent, and/or therapeutic molecule
Medicine = dosage form, formulation, drug delivery system, Drug + excipent
Define Absolute bioavailability
fraction of the drug in the dosage form that arrives in the systemic circulation
Why does “available at the site of action” translate to arrives to the systemic circulation?
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.
What are the types of administration (ROA)?
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)
Describe transdermal delivery and absorption
Absorption rate is low and occurs in capillary bed of dermis, but drug must first penetrate avascular epidermis
What is stratum corneum?
Structure of tightly packed dead cells
Advantage of transdermal drug absorption?
Long acting (hours to days), and no first pass metabolism
Key features of Gastrointestinal drug absorption
- Large Surface area
- High permability (due to lipid bilayer, gaps between cells which asbsorbs hydrophillic drugs, and specific carrier systems can be exploited)