Pharmacokinetics Flashcards
What do a. Pharmacodynamics b. Pharmacokinetics mean?
a. Pharmacodynamics = what a drug does to the body
b. Pharmacokinetics= what a body does to a drug
What is an issue pharmacokinetics brings?
Makes it difficult to work out what conc of a drug will make it to the target organ without it being toxic or too low for the desired therapeutic response.
What is an issue pharmacodynamics brings?
Different ethnic groups have individual responses to drugs, they have different therapeutic windows.
What effects do the physiochemical (concentrations) properties of a drug have on pharmacodynamics?
The physiochemical properties of a drug will effect the affinity, efficacy and potency.
What effect do the physiochemical properties (concentrations) of a drug have on pharmacokinetics?
Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, and Excretion (ADME)
What are the 4 key principles of Pharmacokinetics and what do they regulate?
> ADME = Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion
> Together they regulate the conc of the drug at the intended target site.
What interactions will occur no matter how selective a drug may be or how high the conc is?
Off target effects will always occur due to low affinity interactions with other proteins.
If a drug such as a tablet is ingested, how is it absorbed and distributed through the body in 4 steps?
- Move into the stomach
- Passed onto small intestine quickly
>Most absorption occurs here - Crosses plasma membrane of cells lining intestine t leave gut into blood vessels.
- Bulk flow (drug in plasma) carries the drug around the cardiovascular system towards target.
How does the size of the drug effect the diffusion through plasma membrane and why?
> Large molecules diffuse slower across plasma membranes.
As the diffusion coefficient (diffusion rate) = 1/Sqrt (molecular weight), so the larger the molecular weight the slower the rate of diffusion.
Does physiochemical properties of drugs effect the transport or absorption of the drug more?
The absorption
What are the 5 factors which effect absorption of a drug?
- Site/ method of administration
- Molecular weight
- Lipid solubility
- pH and ionization of the drug
- Carrier mediated transport
What are the 4 main mechanisms for how drug diffuse in and out of membranes?
- Diffuse through lipid-bilayer
2.Diffuse through aqueous pore (ion channels) - Diffusion through carriers
- Through bulk flow using Pinocytosis and Transcytosis.
What is Pinocytosis and transcytosis, what is an example of them being used?
> Pinocytosis is when the membrane evaginates trapping extracellular fluid and molecules contained, these then enter the cell.
> Transcytosis, pinocytic vesicles inside the cell move across it and fuse through the other side, releasing the contents at the other of the cell
> Can be sued to transport large proteins, e.g. insulin or antibodies across the blood brain barrier
What 2 physiochemical properties of a drug effect how they diffuse through the lipid bi-layer and why?
- The lipid solubility (the charge)
>The more lipophilic (lipid soluble/ uncharged) the drug is, the more easily it enters the plasma membrane. - The molecular weight of the drug
>Inversely related to the diffusivity (rate of diffusion)
Are non-polar (uncharged) molecules lipid soluble
Yes they dissolve freely in lipids.
What coefficient determines lipid solubility of a drug and what does it mean?
The partition coefficient (how readily a molecule dissolves into water compared to an oil).
What are 3 effects of having non-polar (uncharged) drugs that can dissolve freely across the lipi-bilayer on absorption?
- An increased rate of absorption from the gut.
- Increased penetration into the brain
>Highly lipophilic drugs will enter fats which act as a reservoir across the blood brain barrier - Increased renal elimination as will enter the kidney directly through the bi-layer
What is the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation and what does it show?
> pKa= pH + log10(Ha/A-)
Ha= weak acid
A- = anion
> Used to calculate the proportion of a drug in dissociated or associated form.
Are most drugs weak acids or weak bases?
Weak acids
What happens to weak acids in 1) Aqueous environment 2) Weak acid environment 3) basic environment?
1) Weak acid dissociates into free H+ ion and negative anion.
2)Excess of H+ ions forces equilibrium to the left favouring the forming weak acids.
3) As less free H+ present, pushes equilibrium to the right favouring dissociation of weak acids into H+ and anions.
What is the symbol equation for weak acids dissociating into H+ and an anion?
HA <-> H+ + A-
What does PKa show?
> The pKa of a drug is that point at which the compound is 50% ionized
It is a constsant value for weak acids or weak bases.
What is the PKa value of a) weak acids b) weak bases?
a) below 7
b) Above 7
What is an advantage of weak acid drugs in low pH environments?
Weak acids are in their unionised form which is useful as can diffuse directly across lipid membranes (as are uncharged).
What is convenient about most drugs being weak acids or bases
They both readily form salts, this is easy to put into a tablet or dissolve into a solution to give to a patient.
What is ionic trapping and where are 2 places in the body this occurs and the advantages of it?
> When pH is high so favours dissociation of the weak acid so they are charged and cannot cross the lipid membrane so are trapped in that compartment of the body.
1) In blood vessels the pH is neutral so favours dissociation of weak acids so the drug is carried around by bulk flow.
2) In the bladder pH is 8 favouring dissociation of weak acids trapping the drug in bladder to be passed out of the body in urine.
Is Aspirin a weak acid or a weak base and what is its pKa value?
> Weak acid
3.5
What happens if we increase the pH, by adding sodium bicarbonate for example, of blood plasma?
Causes weakly acidic drugs to be extracted from the CNS and trapped in the plasma due to ionic trapping.
What are the 6 routes for administration of drugs?
1) Intravenous route (injected into bulk flow)
2)Intramuscular injection
3)Intrathecal (directly into cerebral spinal fluid)
4)Inhalation administration
5)Oral or rectal
6)Percutaneous (through skin)
What is an advantage and a disadvantage of Intramuscular injections?
> The conc of drug achieved in plasma is less reliable, due to amount of fat surrounding the area
> Proteins won’t be digested as avoids digestive system.
What is an advantage and a disadvantage of Intrathecal (spinal) routes of administering?
> Rapid access into CNS
> Limited to situations where we want to ensure the drug has a very localized affect in CNS, e.g. used for analgesics during child birth
What is an advantage and a disadvantage of Inhalation administration?
> Useful as lungs are well perfused, so drug easily gets into plasma.
> Restricted to drugs localized to lungs and where drug is a gas
What is an advantage and 2 disadvantages of Oral routes of administration?
> Is the easiest route
1)Foods will effect gut pH which effects the dissociation or association of the drug
2)Portal blood system may directly take drugs from the gut to the liver where they are metabolised?
If a patient needs to take a tablet but is too scared to take it orally, what other route could they take it?
Through the rectal route.
What are 3 advantages and a disadvantage of Percutaneous administration (through skin)?
1)Avoids gut metabolism
2)Rate of drug entry can be slow if desired, e.g. nicotine patches.
3)Can be limited to just the skin it is applied to e.g. allergic reaction cream.
> Some of these drugs are limited to just the skin and can’t enter the plasma.