Routes of Administration: Pharmacokinetics Flashcards
Pharmacokinetics
The motion of medicines
Absorbtion of drug
Movement of a drug from the site of administration to the bloodstream
Distribution
Movement of drug around different tissues in the body
Metabolism
Change of drugs into compounds which are easier to eliminate
Excreation
Irreversible loss of (unchanged) drug from the body
ADME
- Drug at site of administerationis absorbed
- Can be bound or unbound to dissolved protiens
- Drug at action site bound to receptor or distribution to diffrent tissues
- Unchanged drug excreated or metabolite excreation
Drug plasma concentration
- Exeed Concentation - becomes toxic and side effects can occour
- Below the concentration - becomes not effective
- Onset point - when the drug is absorbed and becomes effective
Bioavailability
- IV administeration means entire dose reaches systematic circulation 100% bioavailability
- Dependant on permeability drug route such as capsule or tablet
First pass metabolism
(presystemic)
- Drug absorbed go straight through liver as it passess into the the portal heptic system
- Factor that contributes to bioavailability
- e.g. Used to combat opiate overdose rapid onset required
Metabolism
- Predominately takes takes place in the liver but can also happen elsewhere
- Can be inhibited by other drugs
Phase I metabolism
Oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis
Products are likely to be inactive and more water-soluble
addition of groups to the drug to increase its solubility
Conjugates include glucuronates and sulphates
Oral adminstration
- Dosage form travels to the main sites of absorption – stomach and small intestines
- Drug must cross lipophilic barriers to be absorbed
- Amount of drug which enters the systemic circulation depends upon the bioavailability
Advantages of parental route
- Useful if drug labile in GI tract
- Fast-acting
- Prolonged effect possible with IM
- Localised effect, e.g. intra-articular
- Drugs can be administered to unconscious patients
- 100% bioavailability for IV
Inhalation route
- Drug is delivered directly to the lungs typically via an inhaler or a nebuliser
- Typically used for a local effect