Pharmacokinetics I Absorption & Distribution Flashcards
Define bioavailability.
What are some factors that affect drug absorption?
The fraction (F) of the administered dose that reaches the systemic circulation in its active form.
a. Membrane permeability. b. Availability of transport processes.
c. Available surface area.
d. pH and concentration gradients.
Define enteral drug administration. What are some examples?
Explain some implications of this route of administration and how it may affect bioavailability.
administration through the digestive tract
Ex: oral, sublingual, rectal
First-pass effect: some drugs are highly metabolized when they pass through the liver—only a fraction (F) of the absorbed drug reaches the systemic circulation (F = bioavailability).
Enterohepatic circulation: drugs may be secreted into the bile and reabsorbed via the intestine. This can delay delivery to the systemic circulation and may reduce bioavailability.
Define parenteral. What are some examples?
(given by routes other than the digestive
tract, usually injected))
subcutaneous intramuscular intravenous intrasynovial intrathecal buccal vaginal urethral ocular nasal aural
What does ADME stand for?
Absorption
Distribution
Metabolism
Excretion
Of what significance is the measurement of drug concentration in plasma?
For most drugs, the concentration of drug at its site of action will be related to the concentration of drug in the systemic circulation.
Clinical pharmacokinetics relies heavily on measurements of plasma drug concentrations to predict therapeutic and/or toxic effects of drugs.
Distinguish between one-compartment vs Two-compartment distribution.
How does plasma concentration-time profile decline?
How are steady state concentrations achieved?
One-compartment: a rapid equilibrium is achieved between plasma and tissue distribution following drug administration. Plasma concentration-time profile declines mono-exponentially.
Two-compartment: rapid distribution to a central compartment is followed by slow distribution to other tissues/binding sites (second compartment). This results in a biexponential
plasma concentration-time profile. (With repetitive administration, steadystate
concentrations are achieved only after 5-6 elimination half-lives (t½).
Give three examples of drugs that display two-compartment pharmacokinetics.
Digoxin, lidocaine, and phenytoin are examples of drugs that display two-compartment
pharmacokinetics.
Define volume of distribution.
Vd describes how large a blood volume would be required to contain the entire administered
dose at the measured concentration of drug in the blood.
How does drug interaction in tissues like fat and muscle affect drug action?
Accumulation of drugs in tissues (e.g. fat & muscle) can prolong drug action.
“drug reservoirs”
What is a “drug reservoir”?
Accumulation of drugs in tissues (e.g. fat & muscle) can prolong drug action.
Define pharmacokinetics.
Pharmacokinetics relates the time courses of a drug’s absorption, distribution, and
elimination (metabolism & excretion) to the intensity and time course of its pharmacological
(therapeutic and/or toxic) effects.
What is minimum effective concentration?
Duration? Intensity?
Minimum effective concentration: the threshold that must be reached before seeing a therapeutic effect
Duration- how long conc. remains above that minimum effective concentration threshold
Intensity- how far above that threshold it gets
What is the clinical significance of area under the curve?
- Used to compare amount of drug that reaches the systemic circulation by different
routes of administration: determine bioavailability (F).
AUC= dose/CL or F
- Used to compare clearance (CL) of a drug in different individuals after administration of
the same dose via the same route.
Define drug absorption.
The processes by which drugs move from their site of administration to the plasma.
Describe the processes following oral drug administration.
- disintegration of solids and dissolution of drug in fluids of gastrointestinal tract
- passage of drug across or between cells to reach the systemic circulation.
Name two organs that have a large surface area for absorption. Which is the main site for absorption, why?
Stomach, small intestine
The small intestine is the main site for absorption of most orally administered drugs because it has a much larger surface area than the stomach.
rate of absorption is directly proportional to available surface area
Give examples of passive and active transport.
Describe the processes.
passive: paracellular transport, diffusion, faciliated diffusion
active: ABC transporters (use ATP-Requires expenditure of cellular energy.)
Involves specific molecular interactions:
transporters for amino acids, glucose, peptides, organic acids/bases etc. can transport structurally related drugs across membranes.
The process is saturable.
Drugs that are transported by a carrier mechanism can compete with other drugs that utilize the same mechanism—this may limit the absorption of either drug.
What size drugs will pass across membranes via aqueous diffusion?
Describe what drives this process and describe the possible routes.
small molecules ( less than 100 kD mol. weight) passive movement driven by concentration gradient route may be paracellular or via aqueous pores
What kind of drug diffusion is most common?
lipid diffusion
passive process driven by concentration gradient
(rate of absorption increases with increasing the drug concentration)
How does lipid-solubility affect a drug’s rate of transport? Describe.
the more lipid-soluble the faster the rate of transport
lipid-soluble drugs cross membranes readily, but may be poorly soluble in aqueous gut fluids, which may limit their absorption.
(rate of absorption increases with increasing the drug concentration)