Week 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Define “Pharmacokinetics”

A

How the drug is altered as it travels through the body

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2
Q

Define “Pharmacodynamics”

A

Mechanism of Action

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3
Q

Name the 2 Types of Pharmacologic Action

A
  1. Drugs which change the environment of body cells

2. Drugs which bind to receptors on cell membranes and alter cellular physiology

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4
Q

What can Influence Drug Responses?

A
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Weight
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5
Q

List the 4 processes in Pharmacokinetics

A
  1. Absorption
  2. Distribution
  3. Metabolism
  4. Excretion
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6
Q

What factors influence absorption of medication?

A
  1. Lipid Solubility
  2. Surface Area
  3. Blood Flow at Administration Sites
  4. Age
  5. Organ Health
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7
Q

How does the “Absorption” process work?

A
  • Medication passes from source of administration into the blood stream
  • Involves active and passive transport
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8
Q

How does the “Distribution” process work?

A
  • Depends on blood flow and ability to cross cell membrane
  • Organs w/ large blood supply receive the medication quickly (heart, liver, kidney)
  • Skin, fat, muscle receive medication slow
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9
Q

How does the “Metabolism” process work?

A
  • A.k.a. biotransformation
  • The ability to change the drug from its dosage form into a water soluble form, which is then excreted
  • Most drugs are metabolised in the liver
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10
Q

How does the “Excretion” process work?

A
  • The elimination of drugs from the body

- Most drugs are excreted by the kidneys

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11
Q

Define “Half-Life”

A

The amount of time it takes for half of that drug to be eliminated by the body

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12
Q

What is an Additive Interaction?

A

2 drugs working together simultaneously

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13
Q

What is an Antagonistic Interaction?

A

Less than the desired effect of one or both of the drugs

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14
Q

What is a Synergistic Interaction?

A

Total effect greater than if they were given alone

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15
Q

What is an Incompatibility Interaction?

A

Often causes drugs to precipitate out of solution or it may cause a visible change in colour

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16
Q

Define “Receptor”

A

Receives chemical information from other molecules

17
Q

Define “Natural Agonist”

A

Substances within the body that produce responses when they bind to and “switch on” a receptor (the master key)

18
Q

Define “Agonist”

A

Mimic natural agonists, binding to receptors to create the same effect - greater physiological response

19
Q

Define “Antagonist”

A

Binds to receptor and blocks agonist’s access to receptor

20
Q

List the Drug Families

A
  1. -ocaine = local anaesthetic
  2. -cillin = penicillin
  3. -olol = beta blockers
  4. Ceph- = cephalosporins
  5. -statin = HMG-CoA inhibitors
  6. -pril = ACE inhibitors
  7. -azepam = benzodiazepines