INTRODUCTION to Pharmacology
Download
Report
Transcript INTRODUCTION to Pharmacology
BIOAVAILABILITY
Defined
as the proportion of drug conc
that reach the systemic circulation
following administration.
This is measured by the area under the
curve AUC
AUC= A / Ke
A:
the point or concentration where the
drug reach max plasma concentrated
Ke: elimination rate constant (0.7/ t½)
f = AUC PO/AUC IV
• Ke: the time were the concentration of the
drug in plasma drop by 50% (elimination
constant)
• IV doses have 100% bioavailability, f = 1
Factors affecting Bioavailability
A- Extent of absorption:
Usually any drug taken by oral administration is
incompletely absorbed
B- First- pass metabolism:
After absorption of a drug it goes to the liver
through portal circulation were it is metabolized
to active or inactive compounds (can occur in
the gut).
Some of these compounds are excreted in bile.
Hepatic Extraction ratio (ER)
It
is affected by: rate of hepatic
clearance of the drug and hepatic
blood flow
ER= CL liver/ Q
CL liver: liver clearance of the drug
Q: hepatic blood flow
Systemic Bioavailability (F)
F= f(1-ER)
f: the extent of absorption of the drug
Example:
A drug like morphine if taken orally almost
completely absorbed f=1 hepatic
ER=0.67 so
F=(1-ER)=1-0.67=0.33
F= 0.33×100=33%
VOLUME OF DISTRIBUTION
Vd:
relates to the amount of drug in the body
to the concentration of the drug in blood or
plasma
Vd= amount of drug in body
C
It is affected by protein binding.
Only unbound drug (free fraction) exerts
pharmacolological effects
The higher the Vd, the lower the plasma
concentration and vice versa
Vd is low when a high % of drug is bound
to plasma proteins
Special Barriers to Distribution
Placental
Most drugs cross the placental barrier, but fetal
blood level is usually lower than maternal
Blood-Brain
Permeable to lipid soluble or very small drug
molecules
Redistribution
Lipid-soluble drugs redistribute into fat tissues
prior to elimination - repeated doses cause
saturation – may prolong duration of action
DRUG ELIMINATION
It involves the following:
1- Drug metabolism: which include enzymatic
conversion of one chemical entity to another
2- Drug excretion: includes the elimination of
drugs either unchanged or metabolized
It occurs through the kidney, hepato-billiary
and lung.
Drug Metabolism
Lipophilic
compound are not excreted by the
kidney and they need to become more
soluble or polar to be excreted.
Metabolism occurs mainly in the liver
(CYP450 system)
Metabolism may result in formation of active
metabolites (diazepam – nordiazepam)
Prodrugs lack activity until they undergo
bioactivation (clorazepate – nordiazepam)
Metabolism involves two phases:
Phase -1 reaction: (catabolic)
it
includes: oxidation, reduction, and
hydrolysis reaction.
It is called “the microsomal mixed function
oxidase system”.
Major phase 1 enzymes – localized in smooth
ER of liver, GI tract, lungs, and kidneys
It
includes two enzymes:
1) NADPH cytochrome reductase
2) CYP450 system
Require O2 and NADPH
Multiple CYP families vary by substrate
specificity and sensitivity to inhibitors &
inducing agents
CYP3A4
Major isoform with wide substrate range
Inhibited by cimetidine, macrolides, azoles
& ethanol (acute)
Induced by carbamazepine, phenobarbital,
phenytoin, rifampicin, & ethanol (chronic)
CYP2D6
Genotypic variations in hydroxylation (fast /
slow)
Substrates include codeine, debrisoquin &
metoprolol
Inhibited by haloperidol & quinidine; not
inducible
Other Phase 1 metabolism
Monoamine oxidases metabolize NE, 5HT,
and tyramine
Alcohols
metabolized
via
alcohol
dehydrogenase (ADH) to aldehydes then
aldehyde dehydrogenoase (inhibited by
disulfram)
Phase -2 reaction:
It include conjugation with other groups to
make it more soluble.
Groups used in conjugation:
glucoronyl,
sulfate,
methyl,
acetyl,
glycyl
glutathione
This phase can occur in the kidneys
Acetylation is genetically determined. Fast
acetylators and slow acetylators (develop SLE
like syndrome when given INH, hydralazine,
procainamid or INH
Transferases: usually inactivate drugs, but may
activate (e.g. morphine, minoxidil). May follow a
phase I hydroxylation, but also occur directly
Glucuronidation – inducible; reduced activity in
neonate
RENAL EXCRETION
There are 3 main process for Renal excretion
of a drug:
1- Glumerular filtration rate: (GFR)
This depends on the molecular weight of the
drug and the extents of binding to plasma
proteins.
2- Tubular secretion:
Here drug molecules are transferred by two
independent and non-selective carrier systems
i.e. Transport of acidic compounds or basic
compounds
They
transport drug molecules against
conc. gradient so can reduce the plasma
conc. of the drug to zero.
E.g. penicillin
3- Diffusion across the renal tubules:
Renal tubes can be freely permeable (the
drug concentration in the plasma and in the
renal tube is equal)
DRUG ELIMINATION (CLEARANCE)
Defined
as the volume of plasma containing
the amount of substance that is removed by
the kidney in unite time
CL= Cu Vu
Cp
CL: Clearance
Cu: Urine Concentration
Cp: Plasma Concentration
Vu: Volume of Urine
CLEARANCE
Equals rate of elimination divided by plasma level
Constant for 1st order elimination
Total body clearance CL = CLR + CLER (extra
renal)
With no secretion or reabsorption renal clearance
is the same as glomerular filtration rate, CLR =
GFR
If drug is protein bound then CLR = GFR x free
fraction
There are two ways for
drug elimination:
1- First Order Kinetic
2- Zero Order Kinetic
First Order Kinetic (un- saturable)
Defined as the amount of drug removed
is direct proportion to its concentration in
plasma.
ZERO- ORDER KINETICS
(SATURABLE)
Here
drugs are removed at a constant rate
regardless the plasma concentration
levels because it is an enzyme dependent
process so it has limited capacity.
Example:
Ethanol
Phenytoin
Salicylates
Blood Alcohol concentration
t½
10.9
7.6
4.3
TIME
Dose Administration
Alcohol is eliminated
at a rate of 4mmol/l
regard less the
plasma concentration
t½ HALF LIFE OF A DRUG
Is the time required by the body to eliminate 50%
of the drug concentration
t½= Vd x 0.7
CL
It is important to indicate the time required to
attain 50% of the steady state
This helps in the setting up of a dosage regime
which produces:
stable plasma drug concentrations
keeps the level of drug below toxic levels but
above the minimum effective level
Loading Dose
This is given when an effective plasma level
of drug must be reached quickly.
This requires a dose of the drug which is
larger than is normally given.
This dose is given as a one off.
Maintenance dose:
This is the dose given when the required
plasma level of drug has been reached.
It is the normal recommended dose.
This is then continued at regular intervals to
maintain a stable plasma level .