pharmacology for medical imaging Flashcards
what is pharmacology
the study of the actions, mechanism, uses and adverse effects of drugs
what is a drug
natural/semi-synthetic or synthetic substance that alters the physiological state of a living organism/system
what 2 disciplines is pharmacology divided into
pharmacodynamics
pharmacokinetics
what are the 7 ways drugs are classified (named)
- chemical structure
- source
- target organ/site of action
- mode of action
- therapeutic uses
- physiological system
- physical effects
what are the 3 types of names a drug has
chemical e.g hydroxyphenyl acetamide
non-proprietary (generic) e.g paracetamol
proprietary (brand) panadol
define pharmacodynamics
discipline studying the effects of a drug on various systems in the body
(looks at how drug binds to target site and initiates change)
what are 3 characteristics of a drug as they bind to receptors to initiate change
agonist
partial agonist
antagonist (competitive or non-competitive)
explain the what agonist partial agonist and antagonist characteristics of drugs are
agonist = fully activates the receptor
partial agonist = partial activates the receptor (not to maximum) (despite agonist being present, so long as the partial agonist is bonded, the receptor can only be partially activated)
antagonist = causes no action of receptor when bonded but if agonist and partial agonist is present, it prevents them from activating the receptor (as it is bonded)
define pharmacokinetics
fundamental scientific discipline that underpins the administration of drugs
(follows drug from moment its administered to when its eliminated from body)
Pharmacokinetics = what body does to drug
pharmacodynamics = what drug does to body
what are the 4 principles/processes of pharmacokinetics
- absorption
- distribution (drug spreads thru body)
- metabolism (process of body converting drug into metabolites being easy to eliminate)
- elimination (drug eliminated from body)
what is mean by absorption in PK
amount of drug in general circulation
what is bioavailability and how is it calculated
fraction of drug available to produce effect
F = (amount of drug in general circulation / amount of drug administered)
what are 3 concepts related to PK
- drug transfer
- drug properties
- effect of pH
what is drug transfer
drug must cross several barriers to be absorbed, distributed and eliminated from body
what are the 3 mechanisms of drug trasnfer
passive diffusion
active transport
facilitated transport
what are characteristics of drug properties
drug formulations e.g solid, liquid, polymer
drug chemistry e.g molecular shape/size, state of ionisation
what is water partition coefficient
a measure of the relationship between lipophilicity (fat solubility) and hydrophilicity (water solubility) of a substance.
what are most drugs in term of the pH scale
most drugs are weak acids or bases
in solution they present as a mix of ionised and nonionised forms
what are 2 things the degree of dissociation (of drugs in solution) dependant on
- pH of solution
- pKa of drug (dissociation constant)