Drug elimination 1 (L6) Flashcards

1
Q

what is ADME?

A

absorption
distribution
metabolism
excretion

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2
Q

what is first pass metabolism?

A

the concentration of a drug is greatly reduced before it reaches the systemic circulation

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3
Q

what is enterohepatic recirculation (HER)?

A

drugs that are eliminated in the bile can be reabsorbed in the GI tract

secreted into bile which is then stored in the gall bladder and released into the duodenum

allows a gradual decrease - only a small amount gets recirculated
• increases half-life

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4
Q

process of enterohepatic recirculation (HER)?

A

1) drug given orally
2) moves through the gut and absorbed into blood
3) transported to liver
4) transferred to gall bladder in bile
5) secreted into small intestine
6) back to beginning

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5
Q

factors that affect distribution?

A

ability to cross a cell membrane

blood perfusion of the tissue or organ

plasma protein binding ability

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6
Q

how are drugs distributed to the tissues?

A

through slit junctions - fairly big gaps in between cells

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7
Q

what do slit junctions do?

A

act as a sieve

allows drug to get into the interstitium

drug then gets into active tissue cells either by simple or active transport

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8
Q

what is the plasma compartment?

A

is the drug being in the blood at that time

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9
Q

what is plasma and how are drugs affected by it?

A

plasma is an aqueous environment and the drug will either be happy or unhappy in that environment depending on whether it is hydrophilic or lipophilic

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10
Q

what happens if a drug has a high molecular weight?

A

it will get bound to plasma proteins really well meaning it will sty in the the blood stream and not be distributed well

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11
Q

what happens to unbound drugs?

A

only unbound drugs can leave the blood stream and get into the tissues

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12
Q

2 examples of plasma proteins that are important in pharmacokinetics

A

AAG - alpha1 acid glycoprotein

HSA - human serum albumin

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13
Q

what is AAG?

A

alpha1 acid glycoprotein
• it is an acute phase protein
• a natural response to inflammation and stress
also gets rid of drugs

person with high amounts of AAG may need a higher dosage to compensate for the amount of plasma binding that occurs

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14
Q

what is HSA?

A

human serum albumin
• binds acidic drugs

when a person is malnourished, they don’t have free amino acids to build anabolic compounds so one of the first things lost is HSA - energy go into building more important things

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15
Q

what happens if you have little HSA?

A

a person with less HSA has less free drug bound so it is distributed more effectively

would need a lower dose

albumin levels are often measured before drug is administered to make sure malnourished people don’t overdose

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16
Q

what is volume of distribution?

A

a volume that would contain all of the drug at the concentration it would be seen in the blood

= total amount of drug administered (dose) / plasma drug concentration

the higher the Vd, the better the drug is distributed

17
Q

stages of drug metabolism

A

phase I - occurs in the liver and mainly mediated by CYPs

phase II - mediated by bigger enzymes such as UGTs and are anabolic (add molecules onto a drug)

18
Q

goal of drug metabolism

A

the goal of these processes is to make a drug more water soluble so its easier to excrete

19
Q

what are prodrugs?

A

when metabolism activates a drug

they undergo phase I and then the drug becomes active

they are made more useful instead of more excretable

20
Q

mechanisms of elimination

A

volatile gases - exhaled amor

water soluble - filtered out in kidney –> urine

mass transport in gut - faeces

secretion into glands - breast milk and sweat

21
Q

what is clearance (CL)?

A

the volume of plasma (or blood) cleared of the compound per unit of time

= sum of all organ CL processes

= IV dose / IV AUC
= (oral dose x F) / oral AUC

22
Q

what is the elimination rate constant (Kel)?

A

the fraction of drug in the body that is removed per unit of time

is a gradient
change in y over x

23
Q

what does half-life tell us?

A

how long a drug lasts in the body

time taken for plasma concentration to reduce by half

t(1/2) = ln2 / Kel

24
Q

what does fenestrated mean?

A

contained windows or perforated

25
Q

what is enterohepatic circulation?

A

cycling of drug between gut and liver

26
Q

what is partioning?

A

used to describe the movement of unbound drug from the plasma into tissues