Pharmacodynamics Flashcards
three main phases of drug action
1) pharmaceutical phase: disintegration of dosage from dissolution of active substances
2) pharmacokinetic phase: ADME
3) Pharmacodynamic phase: drug-receptor interaction in target tissue
EFFECT
most drugs will likely interact with many other _____ within a given clinical dose range used therapeutically
receptors
the chemical forces that contribute to drug binding
electorstatic, hydrogen bonding, van der Waal’s forces (at closer distances), or hydrophobic forces (between lipophillic components)
- therefore most drug binding interactions are reversible and don’t form a covalent bond
all drugs interact only with ____ receptors
unoccupied
receptor binding is a ______ _____ process
dynamic equilibrium
binding sites vs receptors
-binding sites can bind a substance but are not themselves capable of initiating a susequent response while receptors can
for any receptor population, the percent occupied (fractional occupancy) is dependent only on the drug’s ____ and ____
affinity and concentration (dose)
drug affinity constant (Kd)
Kd = (k2/k1) = (koff/kon) = ([D][R] / [DR])
=equilibrium dissociation constant
-represents a measure of the propensity of a drug to bind to a given receptor
-drug affinity and Kd values are inversely related
-also represents the concentration of that drug required to occupy 50% of a receptor population
receptro fractional occupancy is dependent on _____ and _____
drug affinity and drug concentration
converting to Kd units
- if the Kd of a drug is 1nM, then a conc of 1nM would = a conc of 1Kd and 2nM would be 2 Kd units
- causes the conc vs receptor occupation curve to be representative of how receptor occupancy would increase for a drug
concentration as Kd units and the fractional occupancy
- .01 Kd =1% occupancy
- .1 Kd = 9%
- 1 Kd =50%
- 10 Kd = 91%
- 100 Kd = 99%
mathematical response in the body to the drug
- the magnitude of the response will be some function of the total number of receptors occupied
- response = f[(fractional occupancy)(receptor density)] or f[total # of receptors occupied]
drug selectivity
- dependent on the relative affinities of a drug for various receptors (comparative Kd values for various receptors) and for any drug
- selectivity will decr as drug dose is incr
selectivity window for drugs
- some drugs need a certain selectivity window where they will only activate the target receptors and not the other receptors
- other drugs have such a small selectivity window that you have to plan for activating the other receptors (side effects)
dose-response relationship
- this is the correspondence between the amount of drug and the magnitude of the effect
- increasing the dose increases the effect in a graded manner
simple occupancy theory
- one to one relationship between occupation and response
- not very representative of biology
modified occupancy theory
-depends on potency and maximal efficacy
potency
- concentration or dose of drug needed to produce 50% of that drug’s maximal response
- depends on the drug’s affinity for the receptor and the efficiency with which the receptor activation is coupled to the response
maximal efficacy (=intrinsic activity)
- maximal response produced by the drug
- full agonist: intrinsic activity = 1
- partial agonist: intrinsic activity
negative antagonist (inverse agonist)
-an antagonist that can reduce the constitutive activity of receptors
biological activity cannot be determined from …
fractional occupancy
the clinical effectiveness of a drug depends on its _____ and NOT _____
- maximal efficacy
- potency