Pharmacology - Pharmokinetic Flashcards

1
Q

What is pharmokinetic?

A

Absorption, distribution, excretion

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2
Q

Describe differences between administration route?

A

IV - more rapid

IM - more prolonged effect (compared SC)

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3
Q

Effect of gastric emptying on absorption?

A

Critical to drug absorption
SA intestine > stomach - most drugs absorbed via intestine
Fed vs fasting state - affect drug availability

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4
Q

What is bioavailability?

A

Fraction of unchanged drug reaching circulation following route admin

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5
Q

What can affect bioavailability?

A

Absorption, first pass metabolism, food

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6
Q

How can physiochemical and physiological factors affect distribution?

A

Physiochemical: size of molecule, degree of ionisation, protein binding

Physiological factors: organ/ tissue size and blood flow

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7
Q

Where do acid and basic drugs bind?

A

Acidic drugs bind to albumin

Basic drugs bind alpha1-acid-glycoprotein

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8
Q

Relationship between free drug and clearance?

A

Increased amount of free drug - increased clearance from circulation

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9
Q

What factors can affect drug distribution?

A
  1. Perfusion - blood flow

2. Permeability - membrane barrier limitation (BBB, placenta)

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10
Q

Where are polar and non-polar drugs excreted?

A

Polar drugs are excreted renally - urine

Non-polar are excreted billiary - faeces

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11
Q

Explain phase I reaction

A

Produce active metabolites - polar

  • Introduction of polar group by oxidation, reduction or hydrolysis
  • If sufficiently polar can be renally excreted
  • Can produce toxic components
  • Catalysed by cytochrome P450
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12
Q

Explain phase II reaction

A

Attachment of endogenous molecule to drug or phase I reaction to produce metabolite

  • often use sulphur, acetyl
  • Produce heavier molecule - less effective
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13
Q

What enzyme is used in phase I reaction

A

Cytochrome P450

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14
Q

Explain cytochrome 3A4 and inducers/ inhibitors

A

Inducers - increase clearance - decrease levels of drug in blood (E.g phenytoin)

Inhibitors - decrease clearance - increase level of drug in blood (e.g erythromycin)

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15
Q

Factors affecting metabolism? (both increase and decrease)

A

Increasing drug level - excessive dose or decreased clearance - liver failure, age

Decrease drug level - low dose or increased clearance
- enzyme induction, first pass metabolism

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