Pharmacokinetics 2: Drug Distribution Flashcards
How are drugs distributed?
Tranditional view: Passive diffusion and strongly influenced by its physicochemical properties.
Binding to proteins in plasma vs tissues is important and blood flow plays a vital role in exposing tissues to circulating drugs.
Emerging view is that drug transporters strongly regulate drug distribution:
SLC transporters move drugs between compartments into tissues. ABC transporters mainly move drugs out of tissues.
What factors influence drug distribution?
Blood flow to particular tissues.
Size of tissues
Binding to plasma proteins
Binding to tissue proteins
Permeability of tissue membranes
Presence of protein transporters on membrane of target tissues.
Where do oral drugs go immediately after absorption?
The liver
Which tissues get more drug?
More well-perfused tissues such as lungs, liver and kidneys.
How do drugs move through capillary walls?
Through fenestrations on capillaries (average gap of 4nm). Most drugs are smaller than this.
What does drug penetration ensure?
Ready access to drug receptors on cell surfaces.
What is the main barrier to substance exchange by diffusion?
The basal membrane.
What molecules can pass easily through basement membrane?
Molecules smaller than 10 kDa
What replaces fenestrations in brain capillaries?
Tight junctions
What influences where around tissues the drug accumulates?
Their mass, polarity, and lipophilicity
Where do drugs accumulate in tissues?
Intracellularly
Within interstitial fluid
or in Fat
What does the volume of distribution tell us?
It provides information about how the drug is distributed if we assume the body behaves as one homogenous compartment.
What is the formula for V distribution?
Dose/plasma concentration
What happens in reality to drug distribution?
Its distribution would usually reflect plasma concentrations within the body.
What is the one compartment model of drug distribution?
Drug is evenly distributed throughout the body.