Pharm 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What structural changes are involved in the metabolism of a drug?

A

Biotransformation of a lipophilic compound to a more hydrophilic compound to facilitate elimination.

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2
Q

What are the two phases involved in drug metabolism?

A
  1. Phase 1 (the P450 enzymes)

2. Phase 2 (glucuronidation) - particularly slow in felines where larger doses are required

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3
Q

Provide an example of a drug that will induce hepatic enzymes:

A

anti-convolscent drugs

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4
Q

Provide an example of a drug that will inhibit hepatic enzymes:

A

ketoconazole (an anti fungal) inhibits the metabolism of a more expensive drug (cyclosporine)

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5
Q

What is meant by the term “sequelae to metabolism” and what is an example of a drug that has this action?

A

This is where the conversion of prodrugs occurs through the formation of an active metabolite (e.g. tramadol, prednisone)

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6
Q

What is the main site of elimination for drugs?

A

kidneys

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7
Q

What is the pharmokinetic parameter clearance (PI)?

A

Elimination is quantified by clearance which represents the addition of all of the clearance pathways summed together to get a number

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8
Q

Define the terms full antagonist, full agonist, partial response and mixed agonist-anatagonist?

A
  • No response at all = full antagonist
  • Full response = full agonist
  • Partial response = partial agonist
  • Mixed agonist-antagonist = agonist at one particular receptor while being an antagonist at another (e.g. butorphanol)
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9
Q

Compare the terms drug potency and drug efficacy:

A
  • Potency of drug = [drug] required for half of its effect. No influence on the magnitude of the effect
  • Magnitude of a drug’s effect = efficacy
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10
Q

Differentiate between the terms loading dose and maintenance dose:

A
  • The Loading Dose = the amount of drug that is given initially to obtain the desired [plasma] as soon as possible (mg/kg).
  • The Maintenance Dose = rate at which the drug needs to be administered to maintain the desired plasma concentration (mg/kg/min) important to realise it has a time element in it.
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11
Q

If the loading dose is not administered will the required plasma concentration still be achieved?

A

If the initial loading dose is not administered the plasma dose will still be achieved it will just take a lot longer

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12
Q

What are the factors that can limit how loading doses are administered?

A
  1. Volume of distribution

2. Toxicity of the drug

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13
Q

What are the factors to consider when converting the maintenance dose into a practical dosing interval?

A
  • How quickly the plasma drug concentration decreases (the drug’s half-life)
  • The therapeutic window and compliance
  • Compliance – maximum compliance by giving higher doses less often (problem lies with jumping up plasma concentrations to very high levels) . This method is largely limited by the span of the therapeutic window
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