Pharmacokinetics Flashcards
What relationship does pharmacokinetics describe?
dose-concentration
What relationship does pharmacodynamics describe?
concentration-effect
Pharmacokinetics = what the ___ does to ___
body does to the drug
What are the 4 components of pharmacokinetics?
Absorption
Distribution
Metabolism
Excretion
What is Fick’s Law of Diffusion?
rate of diffusion = concentration gradient * surface area* diffusion coefficient
/membrane thickness
The rate of diffusion is directly proportional to:
concentration gradient, surface area, diffusion coefficient
The rate of diffusion is inversely proportional to:
membrane thickness
Define bioavailability
Fraction of unchanged drug that reaches the systemic circulation following administration by any route
If the entire amount of a drug is absorbed into systemic circulation = 100% bioavailability
What is the equation for bioavailability?
F = (bioavailable dose/administered dose) * 100
Where is the principle site of absorption for oral meds?
Small intestine (large SA)
Bioavailability of oral meds
unreliable –> 5-100%
pH of the small intestine
7-8
pH of the stomach
1.5-2.0
Where do the veins in the mouth drain?
SVC
Bioavailability of sublingual meds
60-100%
What routes of administration are not subject to first pass hepatic metabolism?
sublingual (mouth veins drain into SVC)
intranasal
sometimes rectal
parenteral
Bioavailability of intranasal meds
up to 95%
Bioavailability of rectal meds
30-100%
The ____ rectum is more subject to first pass metabolism
proximal
What properties must transdermal drugs have?
lipid and water soluble
MW<1000 (fairly small)
dose <10mg in 24hrs
pH 7-9
Bioavailability of IV meds
100%
Bioavailability of SQ and IM meds
75-100%
What percentage of the adult male body is water?
60%
What percentage of the adult female body is water?
50%
What percentage of an infant’s BW is water?
70%
What percentage of an elderly person’s BW is water?
50-55%
Volume of total body water
42L
Volume of water in ECF
14L (~20% BW)
Volume of water in plasma
4L (~5%)
Volume of water in interstitial fluid
10L (~15%)
Volume of water in ICF
28L (~40% BW)
Define k12
rate constant = constant rate at which a drug moves
Define k21
rate of movement from the peripheral to central compartment
List the organs in the central compartment
lungs
heart
brain
liver
endocrine glands
kidney
List the organs/body parts in the peripheral compartment
muscle
skin
fat
The volume of distribution (Vd) relates:
amount of drug given to the plasma concentration
What is the equation for Vd
amount of drug / desired plasma concentration
What is the most common form of molecule movement in anesthesia?
lipid diffusion (most drugs have to cross the BBB which is a lipid membrane)
What drive aqueous diffusion?
concentration gradient
Describe a substance that moves via aqueous diffusion
lipid insoluble
hydrophilic
MW up to 30,000 (smaller)
What does active transport require?
sodium pump which utilizes ATP to move substances against their concentration gradient
Define endocytosis
phagocytosis (solids) or pinocytosis (liquids) –> the wall of a membrane engulfs the molecule to move it into the cell against its concentration gradient
What type of drugs bind to albumin?
acidic
List the factors that decrease albumin in the body
renal dz
liver dz
old age
malnutrition
pregnancy
What effect will a decrease in albumin have on drugs in the body?
a decrease in albumin results in an increase in the amount of free drug
What type of drugs bind to AAG?
basic (e.g. local anesthetics)
What is AAG?
alpha 1 acid glycoprotein
What factors increase AAG in the body?
surgical stress
MI
chronic pain
RA/inflammation
old age
What factors decrease AAG in the body?
neonates
pregnancy (3rd trimester)
What is the relationship between Vd and protein binding?
Vd is inversely proportional to the amount of protein binding
What is the equation for finding the free fraction of a drug?
(new value - old value)/old value x 100
What types of molecules have good lipid solubility?
nonpolar
nonionized
Are ionized molecules generally lipophilic or hydrophilic?
hydrophilic (do not readily cross membranes)
What effect does ionization have on particles with similar charges?
similar charges repel each other
For a drug to be eliminated through the renal system, it needs to be (ionized/nonionized)?
ionized
For a drug to be metabolized it needs to be (ionized/nonionized)?
nonionized
Define pKa
dissociation constant = the pH at which 50% of the drug is ionized and 50% of the drug is nonionized
What determines ionization?
the degree of ionization of a drug depends on its dissociation constant (pKa) and the pH of the blood
What kind of acids/bases do not dissociate?
strong acids and strong bases
Weak acids and weak bases exist in solution as ____
salts
Weak acids form salts with…
positively charged ions (Na+, Mg+, Ca++)
e.g. sodium thiopental, sodium nitroprusside
Weak bases form salts with…
negatively charged ions (Cl-, sulfate SO2-)
e.g. morphine sulfate, lidocaine hydrochloride
Weak acids like to (accept/donate) protons
donate
If you put an acidic drug in a basic solution, what happens to the drug?
it becomes more ionized (less of the drug is in the active form)
If you put an acidic drug in an acidic solution, what happens to the drug?
it becomes more nonionized (more of the drug is in the active form)
As the pH decreases, what happens to the H+ concentration?
increases
Weak acids become more (ionized/nonionized) when the pH falls
nonionized/more active at lower pH
The higher the pKa of a weak acid, the greater the amount of drug exists in the (ionized/nonionized) form in the body.
nonionized/active
ACID gets you HIGH
What is the range for the pKa of acids?
2.3-11.2
Define ANI BIN
acids: nonionized ——— ionized
bases: ionized ———- nonionized
used to compare two acids/two bases to determine which will exist in greater concentration at physiologic pH
Weak bases like to (accept/donate) protons
accept
If you put a basic drug in an acidic solution, what happens to the drug?
it becomes more ionized (less active)
If you put a basic drug in a basic solution, what happens to the drug?
it becomes more nonionized (more active)
What happens to basic drugs as the pH increases?
basic drugs become more nonionized/active at higher pHs
What is the range for the pKas of weak bases?
2.6-9.8
The lower the pKa of a weak base, the greater the amount of drug in the (ionized/nonionized) form at physiologic pH?
nonionized/active (BASES go LOW)
Define metabolism
biotransformation; the conversion of the parent drug into secondary molecules
end products are usually inactive/water soluble to be excreted by kidneys/liver
Where is the primary site of biotransformation/metabolism?
liver
other sites=plasma, lungs, kidney, GI tract, placenta
Describe phase 1 reactions
aka modification
convert a parent drug into more polar metabolites through oxidation, reduction, and/or hydrolysis
Describe oxidation
involves the loss of electrons (catalyzed by cyto P-450)
Describe reduction
involves the addition of electrons (catalyzed by cyto P-450)
Describe hydrolysis
breaking a compound into 2 parts by adding water (by nonspecific esterases and pseudocholinesterase)
*most anesthetic drugs involve hydrolysis in the plasma
List some drugs that undergo hydrolysis
remifentanil
succinylcholine
esmolol
ester local anesthetics
Describe phase 2 reactions
conjugation = couples a parent drug or a phase 1 metabolite with an endogenous substrate to form a highly polar, higher molecular weight (water soluble) end product that can be eliminated in the urine (via glomerular filtration)
What makes premature infants unique when it comes to drug metabolism?
immature liver enzymes
decreased conjugation
–> drugs that are metabolized this way can potentially be toxic to infants
What are the three types of phase 2 reactions?
glucuronidation (via glucuronosyl transferases)
sulfonation (sulftransferases)
acetylation (N-acetyltransferases, NAT)
Products of phase 2 reactions have (little/significant) biologic activity
little or none
Where are the hepatic microsomal enzymes located?
hepatic smooth ER
(also found in kidneys and GI tract)