Multi-compartment Models Flashcards
when two or more decay phases are evident how many exponentials are required
3 or more hence 3 or more compartments
how is the plasma concentration measured for Cp vs. time course in multicompartmental models
Cp = A e-alpha t + B e-beta t + C e-gamma t
how is AUC calculated
AUC = A/alpha + B/Beta + C/gamma
how many 3 compartment models are there
13
what is the most commonly used multi-compartment model
one where oral and IV input are into the same compartment the central compartment which is in the middle
linear multiple compartment models have
a) either second order and zero order input rate constants and zero order distribution and loss rate constants
b) either first order and zero order input rate constants and first order distribution and loss rate constants
c) either first order and zero order input rate constants and second order distribution and loss rate constants
b) either first order and zero order input rate constants and first order distribution and loss rate constants
Rate constants are concentration dependent or independent in linear multi compartment models
independent
what are drawbacks of compartment model approaches (2)
- difficult to relate to physiology and actual pK in the body
- difficult to evaluate changes in haemodynamics, enzyme fcn and protein binding on kinetics
- hypothetical compartments don’t relate to tissues
- difficult to assign specific compartment model uniquely describing a given set of data
- determine based upon the number of exponential terms which makes the choice of model difficult
How are physiological pk models developed
- experimental data is used to propose a model before concentration vs time data is available
- standard values of tissue mass and perfusion rate are obtained form literature
flow models take these 6 things into account
- the various organs of the body
- blood flow to each organ
- membrane permeability to the drug
- protein binding
- partition of drug between blood and tissue
- mass of tissue
what can flow models do that compartment models cannot
- distinguish between arterial and venous blood
- predict hemodynamic effects
what is a primary assumption in flow models
that drug uptake by tissues is via perfusion rather than diffusion limited
what is an advantages of physiological models over compartment models
- ability to more easily relate to physicological factors and predict haemodynamic effects in pk
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What is extraction ration and how is extraction ratio calculated
- drug removal by an organ
- ER = Cl/Q
- where Q is blood from through the organ
What is intrinsic clearance
- ability of the liver to remove drug in the absence of flow limitations
- a measure of enzyme activity, blood flow and blood drug binding
- typically measured for highly extracted drugs with flow dependent clearance