Drug Interactions Flashcards
what are the two types of drug interactions?
Pharmacodynamic
and
Pharmacokinetic
what is a pharmacodynamic interaction?
modification of the pharmacological effect of a drug without altering its concentraiton
examples)
- paracetamol and NSAIDS - improved analgesia
- Vasodilators and Beta Blockers- improved BP control
- Warfarin and Aspirin - bleeding
what is the definition of pharmacokinetic Drug interactions?
modification of the pharmacological effect of a drug through alteration in its concentration either by
1) absorption
2) distribution
3) metabolism
4) excretion
describe the ‘absorption’ pharmacokinetic interaction
GI absorption can be slowed or accelerated by drugs which alter gastric emptying -
example- if you take one drug, then take a laxative, it reduces your absorption of the drug you’ve just taken per oral
Describe ‘distribution’ pharmacokinetic interactions
distribution/protein binding - displacement of a drug from binding sites in plasma increases concentration of free drug available
ex) NSAIDs displaces Warfarin from albumin binding and increased bleeding can result
why does St. John’s Wort effect oral contreceptives?
Interaction of St. John’s Wort with oral contraceptives: effects on the pharmacokinetics of norethindrone and ethinyl estradiol, ovarian activity and breakthrough bleeding.
what sorts of drugs competitively inhibit cytochrome P450 activity?
Erythromycin
Ketoconazole
and Grapefruit juice
therefore they result in inhibition of metabolism of some other antibiotics etc.
grapefruit’s effects on cytochrome P450 is an example of pharmacokinetic interactions or pharmacodynamic interactions?
pharmacokinetic interactions
what sort of things are Cytochrome P450 enzyme inducers?
phenytoin, carbamazepine, rifampicin, barbiturates, alcohol and St.John’s Wort
- therefore they increase the metabolism of many drugs and reduce the plamsa concentrations as a result -
how might an cytochrome P450 inhibitor actually result in ‘loss’ of activity of a drug?
Some drugs awork through an active metabolite of the initial compound - therefore when they are not metabolised, they are not made active - therefore a reduction in metabolism by P450 would result in less active drug present
Describe ‘exrection/clearance’ pharmacokinetic interactions
altering urine flow and GFR can lead to more excretion or less excretion of a drug
ex) NSAIDS reduce renal blood flow and reduce lithium carbonate clearance (toxicity potential)
who is most at risk of experiencing negative drug interactions?
- The elderly - little physiological reserve, altered pharmacokinetics
- severely ill patients - renal or liver disease leading to altered pharmacokinetics, difficulties in distinguishing a drug interaction from disease
- patients who take over the counter medicaiton such as st. john’s wort, alcohol or aspirin
what is the difference between type A and type B adverse effects?
Type A= predictable = like bleeding from warfarin
Type B= bizarre effects like hypersensitivity reactions, teratogenicity, skin reactions etc. from Warfarin