NSAIDS - Week 1 B Flashcards
NSAIDS
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
Alleviation of Pain (analgesia) is the most common use of pharmaceuticals ….
So…we will start with ones you most probably use!
Evolution of a Drug / Medicine
Investigate a ‘folk medicine’ Isolate the ‘active ingredient’ and prove structure
Synthesize ‘natural’ compound to confirm structure and provide material Test for physiological effects; often multiple effects Synthesize compounds with modified structure; to emphasize desired properties to ‘delete’ unwanted effects Test for efficacy and safety
Active constituent is salicylic acid
Salicylic acid is “corrosive” and produces stomach discomfort Acetyl derivative (ASA) is less destructive to the stomach lining So..long term (daily) protection vs blood clots
Binders and fillers
All solid pill formulations contain these
Promote ease of swallowing etc
Use corn starch and microcrystalline cellulose for this purpose
Also, hypromellose and triacetin
General term is Excipient:a pharmacologically inactive substance formulated with the active component
Excipients in aspirin
Cellulose: insoluble fibre: Present in celery etc
Cornstarch: starch is a digestible carbohydrate : energy storage in plants (glucose polymer)
Hypomellose: hydroxypropylmethylcellulose: insoluble cellulose derivative. Binds all other inactives together
Triacetin as an excipient in ASA
Triacetylpropanetriol (source of acetate)
Used to stabilize the formulation against humidity and keep pills from sticking to bottle
Old aspirin: smells of vinegar due to partial hydrolysis of ASA to acetic acid and salicylic acid
Aspirin - Multiple Physiological Effects
Analgesic – reduces or eliminates pain. Antipyretic - lowers or eliminates fever.
Anti-inflammatory agent - reduces or eliminates inflammation. Anti-coagulant - inhibits the formation of blood clots by decreasing platelet concentrations, ie. decreases incidence of heart attacks resulting from the formation of internal clots that can block the flow of blood to the heart.
Daily Low Dose of 75-81 mg aspirin
Maintains normal blood platelet aggregation
Recommended for all men (particularly) over 50 to reduce risk of strokes and heart attacks due to blood clotting
This new use was patented in 1990’s
See Liska pp 359-60 for more discussion
Emergency treatment if a heart attack is suspected
Chew 1 standard 325 mg aspirin (after calling 911) or on the way to the hospital Emergency
Studies show this reaches the bloodstream to act as an anticoagulant in ~ 5 minutes vs. 12 minutes for an aspirin taken with water
Enterically coated Aspirin
Coating of wax, cornstarch, methylcellulose, KOH, methacrylic acid copolymer prevents capsule from dissolving in stomach-goes to small intestine before dissolution, thus helping to prevent stomach irritation
Reye’s Syndrome
Follows flu, small pox, chicken pox (or other viral infection) in children and teenagers
Fatal in ~25% of cases: due to brain swelling (edema) & liver failure
Some correlation with use of salicylates for treatment of flu symptoms
So….NO ASPIRIN to children or teenagers with fever ..
Acetaminophen used instead!!
Anti-inflammatory effects of Aspirin
Rheumatoid arthritis: an auto immune condition (body’s immune system generates antibodies vs. tissue proteins
Result: inflammation/swelling of fingers, toes, knees etc
Prostaglandins : implicated as a chemical factor
COX2 inhibition by Aspirin inhibits prostaglandin synthesis
Acetaminophen
Due to bleeding risks from aspirin and Reye’s syndrome, alternative anti-pyretic analgesics are important
A “coal tar’ analgesic (it is an aniline derivative)
Aniline was 1st obtained by destructive distillation of coal tar
Coal tar
React pulverized solid coal with a stream of hot air and steam: produces 1000’s of products in a viscous oil
Destructive distillation produces many compounds used as starting materials for synthesis
Aniline can be used to make acetaminophen
Advantages of Acet. over Aspirin
No tendency to induce bleeding (not a blood thinner)
Less potential for nausea
Used if aspirin allergies
No risk of Reye’s syndrome in children