L34B - Drug Distribution 1 Flashcards
What is drug distribution?
The reversible transfer of drug from on site to another within the body
What are facts about blood circulation enables efficient drug distribution? (4) (numbers not asked)
- avg subject has 5L of blood = 3L plasma
- avg cardiac output is 5.5L/min at rest
- mixing of drug solution in the blood occurs very fast
- tissue distribution takes time, rate and extent depending on drug and tissues
What is cardiac output?
Amount of blood the heart pumps through the circulatory system in a minute
What is tissue differences in drug sitribution and blood circulation?
Some tissues haev more drug flow, so potentially more exposure to drugs
What are the distribution (potential) steps? (2)
- passage of capillary membrane
- passage of cell membrane
What is paracellular movement of drug influenced by?
Tighetness of the intercellular junctions
What are the 2 categories of transcellular pathways?
- those involving simple diffusion
- those involving facilitative mechs like transporters
What does movemenr of drugs across membrane occur through?
Paracellular ans transcellular pathways
What are the distribution processes? (3)
- passive diffusion
- transporters
- hydrostatic pressure
What is hydrostatic pressure like?
- arterial end pressure > tissue pressue
- tissue pressure > venous pressure
What is the movement like from capillaires to intersitial fluid (ISF)? (3)
- drug transport is independent of lipophilicity, charge and molecular size
- usually easy paracellular transport
- larger molecules, charge becomes more important (-ve = lower perm across renal glomerulus)
What is the movement like from interstitial fluid (ISF) to cells?
passage across is very dependent on:
- drug physicochemical properties (size, charge, lipophilicity)
- drug being subtrate for influx/efflux transporters
What is drug transport across blood-brain barrier, hepatocyte and renal tubule highly dependent on? (3)
- lipophilicity
- charge
- molecular size
What are the effects of charge like?
- large
- exceptions = paracellular transport across the blood capillary membranes and renal glomerulus)
What is membrane transport like for charged drugs?
Membrane transport is slower
- degree of ionisation at physiological pH determines movement across membranes