Elderly - Drugs and Polypharmacy - Part 2 Flashcards
Clinical pharmacology of old age - what is the therapeutic range?
how is absorption affected in old age?
- Physiological changes occur that effect the rate but generally not the extent of absorption from the GI tract - May lead to a delay in onset of action
- Examples - A reduction in saliva production may result in a reduction in the rate of absorption of buccally administered drugs e.g. glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) – coronary vasodilator
______ of absorption not affected by age but ____ is
Drugs take _______ to work
Extent
rate
longer
Distribution:
what body composition changes happen in old age that affect distribution?
Reduced muscle mass
Increased adipose tissue:
•Fat soluble drugs: ↑ Vd, ↑ T1/2, ↑ duration of action e.g. diazepam
Reduced body water:
•Water soluble drugs: ↓Vd, ↑ serum levels e.g. digoxin
Drugs are either fat or water soluble
Increased fat and decreased water as we get older
Distribution:
what body protein binding changes happen in old age that affect distribution?
Decreased albumin:
•↓ binding, ↑ serum levels acidic drugs e.g. furosemide
Many drugs that are bound to protein/albumin and when drugs are bound they are inactive but this decreased in older age as the liver makes less albumin
So lower dose in older person
Distribution:
•___________ permeability across the blood-brain barrier (in old age)
Increased
An increase in permeability across the blood brain barrier allows drugs to be more readily distributed in the CNS
The two most important factors that affect drug distribution in the elderly are changes in ____ _____________ and _______ _______
body composition
protein binding
For fat soluble drugs, in the elderly the Vd is __________ owing to the increase in body fat. E.g. Diazepam, haloperidol, The adipose tissue acts as a reservoir for these drugs and an enhanced t1/2 is also seen, resulting in a ___________ duration of action
increased
prolonged
Water soluble drugs tend to experience a ________ in Vd, resulting in _______ serum levels. This can be found in the case of theophylline, atenolol, propranolol and hydrochlorthiazide.
reduction
higher
Digoxin, although water-soluble has a high Vd. This is due to widespread distrubution into the muscle. The reduction in muscle mass in older people means there is a significant _________ digoxins Vd. The clinical consequence of this is that the loading dose has to be substantially _______ in the elderly.
Drugs with a low Vd such as warfarin is ___ widely distributed. Those with _____ Vd e.g. digoxin, amiodarone are extensively distributed.
reduction
reduced
not
large
metabolism:
•Hepatic metabolism is affected by what in old age?
- Decreased liver mass
- Decreased liver blood flow
•Hepatic metabolism is affected by:
- Decreased liver mass
- Decreased liver blood flow
what are the consequences?
- Toxicity due to reduced metabolism/excretion
- Reduced first pass metabolism
- ↑ in bioavailability with some drugs e.g. propranolol
- Can cause ↓ bioavailability of pro-drugs e.g. enalapril
Lower doses lead to higher doses within the plasma
Prodrugs = have to pass through the liver and be metabolized into an active form
how is excreiton affected by old age?
- Renal function decreases with age
- Reduces clearance and increases half-life of many drugs leading to toxicity
Creatinine clearance ( CrCl ) is an estimate of Glomerular Filtration Rate ( GFR )
Drug accumulates until it reaches a toxic level
Pharmaokinetics is what the ?????
Pharmacodynamics – what the ?????
body does to the drug and how it handles it
drug does to the body
Pharmacodynamics in old age:
__________ sensitivity to particular medicines
Increased