Term
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Definition
percentage or fraction of an administered drug (usually oral) that reaches the systemic circulation, taking into account absorption and degradation |
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Term
What does bioavailability determine? |
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Definition
rate and extent of active drug that reaches the systemic circulation and is available at the site of action |
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Term
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Definition
two preparations will have an equivalent effect |
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Term
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Definition
maintain the required concentration of a drug at a particular site for an appropriate period of time. |
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Term
what should be known to predict therapeutic aim |
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Definition
Knowledge of the absorption, distribution/metabolism and excretion of the drug is essential to achieve this aim
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Term
what is acheived in therapeutic aim? |
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Definition
produce optimum therapeutic effect with the minimum of unwanted effects |
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Term
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Definition
concentration/dos) of drug producing an undesirable effect relative to that producing a therapeutic effect |
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Term
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Definition
TI = TD50 / ED50 OR TD5/ED95
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Term
Is target site always at the site of administration? |
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Definition
may be close to the site of administration, or some distance away and requiring transport of the drug through the blood circulation |
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Term
3 interactive factors affecting drug absorption |
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Definition
Physico-chemical properties of the drug
Formulation of the drug
Site/route of administration |
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Term
What are the properties of drug |
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Definition
Stability, Molecular Weight, Ionization/lipid solubilty, Formulation |
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Term
high molecular weight drugs can easily cross cell membrane.
true or false |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Formulated into a dosage form suitable for a specific route of administration.
The dosage form contains guaranteed amount(s) of active constituent(s), with a shelflife of at least 2 years |
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Term
Compare and contract cost and convenience of tablet/capsule and parenteral |
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Definition
Tablets or capsules are very convenient for both patient and medical staff and are cheap to make.
Parenteral injections are required to be isotonic, sterile,
free of pyrogens, may require skilled personnel to give
them, and are expensive |
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Term
Why would a certain route of drug administration be chosen? |
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Definition
in order to restrict the action of the drug to
particular site(s) in the body (local effect)
or
to allow access of the drug to the whole body
(systemic effect) |
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Term
What type of phase does cell act as? |
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Definition
Lipid Phase separating 2 aqueous phases through which substances must pass if there are no gaps between cells |
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Term
How does drug diffuse across lipid phase? |
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Definition
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Term
How is a drug is taken up at one interface and redistributed at the opposite interface? |
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Definition
Based on lipid/water coefficient
Too lipid - stay in membrane
Too watery - cannot cross the membrane |
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Term
How does an oral drug go to its site of action (not local)? |
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Definition
Drug must be absorbed across a layer of epithelium that forms tight junctions.
Once in the blood it is distributed by passage across capillary endothelial cells into the interstitial fluid.
Then it acts on a surface receptor and do its action |
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Term
How many cell membrane does drug need to cross to get to its site of action? |
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Definition
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Term
What are ways that drug can cross cell membrane? |
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Definition
Lipid diffusion
Aqueous diffusion
Active transport
Transcytosis |
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Term
Passive diffusion of a drug across the membrane depend on what? |
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Definition
lipid solubility (partition coefficient)
concentration gradient |
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Term
The rate of diffusion of a nonpolar molecule is proportional to what? |
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Definition
proportional to their oil-water partition coefficient |
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Term
Hydrocarbon chains of a drug contribute to what characteristic? |
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Definition
contribute to high lipophilicity |
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Term
Hydroxyl group of a drug contribute to what characteristic? |
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Definition
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Term
Permanent cations are well absorbed from the gut
True or False |
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Definition
False!
Very poorly and often erratically |
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Term
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Definition
pH at which 50% ionized and 50% non-ionized |
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Term
Absorption of acidic and basic drug depend on what factors? |
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Definition
pKa of drug
pH of the tissue compartments involved
Partition coefficient of the non-ionized drug species |
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Term
Absorption of weak electrolytes is dependent on what? |
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Definition
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Term
How do ionized species cross membrane? |
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Definition
Ionized groups interact strongly with water and charged groups on proteins |
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Term
What happens to species lacking lipid solubility and electrical resistance? |
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Definition
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Term
What does negative log is pKa mean? |
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Definition
reflects tendency to ionize, which depends on pH or H+ ion concentration |
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Term
For acids, as pH is lowered what happens to the proportion of non-ionized form? |
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Definition
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Term
For base, as pH is increased what happens to the proportion of non-ionized form? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the general form of H-H? |
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Definition
pH = pKa + log [proton acceptor] / [proton donor] |
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Term
Do Antiseptic and antibacterial creams have syetemic effect? |
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Definition
These agents can be toxic if present systemically and
we are relying for protection on the fact that most
drugs are poorly absorbed through intact skin
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Term
How can cyanide poisoning happen? |
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Definition
dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) carry KCN, which can penetrate through the skin
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Term
What is sublingual route of drug? |
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Definition
Drug is rapidly absorbed directly from the mouth by allowing a lozenge to dissolve under the tongue |
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Term
What us the benefit of sublingual route? |
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Definition
Good blood supply and thin epithelium. Avoids first pass metabolism by the liver |
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Term
What is the mechanism behind local oral drug? |
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Definition
they are designed to be poorly absorbed so that a higher and more effective concentration can be maintained in the gut lumen and systemic toxicity will be low |
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Term
What is the mechanism of oral drugs with systemic effect? |
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Definition
the presence of food in the stomach delays gastric emptying and hence slows absorption as absorption primarily occurs in the small intestine |
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Term
What do rectal drugs treat? |
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Definition
Rectal and lower bowel complaints |
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Term
Can rectal drugs have systemic effect? |
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Definition
Systemic absorption of this type of drug can be achieved by this route and first-pass liver metabolism is reduced. |
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Term
What is vaginal cream with estrogen used for? |
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Definition
applied into the vagina to reduce atrophy of the endometrium especially in post-menopausal women |
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Term
Describe the lung anatomy with perspective of drug absorption |
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Definition
Very large surface area and blood supply |
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Term
What is the physical properties of local inhalers? |
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Definition
Can be liquid aerosols or dry powders. |
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Term
What are systemic inhalers excreted? |
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Definition
Gases and volatile organic liquids like general anesthesia are readily absorbed (and excreted) via the lung |
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Term
How are parenteral injection local? |
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Definition
intrathecal route, such as in regional anesthesia, involves injection into the subarachnoid space using a lumbar puncture needle |
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Term
What is the benefit of IV injection (systemic effect)? |
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Definition
fastest and most certain method of drug administration. May be safest for a drug with low TI |
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Term
What is the disadvantage of IV injection (systemic effect)?
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Definition
high concentration of drug will reach the lungs and heart where unwanted actions on sensory receptors and pacemakers may occur |
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Term
What is important about IV injection? |
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Definition
maintain the plasma concentration between narrow limits |
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Term
What is the important factor of SC and IM injections? |
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Definition
blood flow at the site of injection is an important determinant of the rate of drug removal into the systemic circulation |
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Term
How is SC and IM injection better than oral administration? |
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Definition
produce a faster effect than oral administration |
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Term
Why is IM better than IV? |
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Definition
cardiac arrhythmia may be induced by a sudden large increase in epinephrine (β-agonist) in the blood following IV injection
it may also be difficult to give an IV injection due to the
collapsed nature of the circulation |
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Term
What is sustained-release preparation used for? |
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Definition
prolonged systemic action |
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Term
What are "Sustained-release” preparations consist of? |
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Definition
IM or SC injection of a drug salt, ester or complex that
has low water solubility. The formulation may be an
aqueous suspension or an oily solution |
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Term
What are the forms of “Sustained-release” preparations? |
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Definition
ester slowly diffuses out of the oily solution and then hydrolyzed by tissue
a capsule containing granules which dissolve at different
rates in the gut lumen fluid
a solid pellet (implant) of the drug introduced subcutaneously |
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Term
What are the factors that affect drug distribution? |
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Definition
blood flow
capillary permeability (lipid sol., pH, conc. grad.)
protein binding |
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Term
Which organs get majority of drug after absorption in terms of blood flow? |
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Definition
Well-perfused organs will see the majority of drug first after absorption |
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Term
What happens to tissues with limited blood flow? |
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Definition
Delivery to other tissues is slower, limited by flow, so a 2nd phase of distribution occurs. |
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Term
How is the capillary permeability of glomerulus compared to those in skeletal muscle? |
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Definition
Capillaries of the glomerulus much more permeable than those of skeletal muscle |
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Term
Compare the capillaries of liver and brain |
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Definition
Sinusoidal capillaries of the liver lack endothelial layer and permit passage of all molecules.
Brain capillaries do not readily permit passage of drugs unless they are lipid-soluble |
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Term
What dictates passage of drugs in capillaries |
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Definition
Lipid/water partition coefficient dictates passage |
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Term
Do free or protein-bound drugs that is in equilibrium across cell membranes? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the advantage of having protein-bound drug? |
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Definition
Binding of drugs to plasma proteins may provide a reservoir to replenish, by dissociation, when drug lost by metabolism and excretion |
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Term
What effect does competition between 2 drugs for plasma protein binding site have? |
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Definition
Competition can theoretically lead to displacement to increase free drug concentration to enhance effects |
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Term
What is termination of the effect by redistribution? |
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Definition
It is like having a highly lipid soluble drugs, but the drug is short-lived as soon as the lipid is taken up by other tissues such as muscle and fat, the actual drug has poor blood flow per unit mass even though it has high capacity for partition |
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Term
How can BBB be penetrated by drugs? |
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Definition
lipid soluble drugs
if the meninges become inflamed, then drug penetration can rapidly increase; thus CSF concentration of antibiotic can approach that of plasma |
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Term
Can permeant cation cross BBB? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the total body water? |
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Definition
60% body weight, 42L or 0.6L/kg |
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Term
What is the total vascular fluid in the body? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the total extracellular fluid (interstitial) in the body? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the total intracellular fluid in the body? |
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Definition
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Term
What is apparent volume of distribution Vd? |
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Definition
The volume of fluid required to contain all the drug (Q) in the body at the same concentration as that measured in the plasma, CP
In short: apparent volume into which a drug is able to distribute |
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Term
What is the formula of Vd? |
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Definition
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Term
How can Vd increase beyond the value for total body water? |
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Definition
By binding drug outside the plasma compartment or partitioning into body fat |
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Term
What does a large Vd mean? |
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Definition
Drugs with large Vd usually have high lipid solubility and will reach brain and fetus.
Exceptions are where Vd is a consequence of binding |
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Term
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Definition
Drugs that are designed to become more active within the body |
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Term
How are metabolites of a drug compared to the parent drug? |
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Definition
Metabolites of a drug usually have considerably less biological activity than the parent drug |
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Term
What is the aim of transformation? |
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Definition
Aim of transformation is to reduce activity and eliminate the compound |
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Term
What does transformation result in? |
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Definition
Polarity of drug with a loss of therapeutic activity
Formation of toxic products |
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Term
What is the hinderance of drug excretion after transformation? |
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Definition
Properties of drugs that increase passage across cell
membranes hinder their excretion as they diffuse back from the tubular lumen
Thus, re-absorption is reduced |
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Term
What is the corrects the hinderance problem of drug excretion? |
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Definition
Formation of more polar products, which is important for renal and biliary excretion.
Liver and kidney possess specific secretory systems that operate on highly polar compounds |
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Term
What is the major organ for drug metabolism? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens in Phase I - functionalization - of drug metabolism? |
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Definition
hydrolysis, reduction or oxidation are most common |
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Term
What happens during Phase II - biosynthetic - of drug metabolism? |
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Definition
conjugation occurs to produce inactive metabolites |
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Term
Which phase produce more water-soluble compounds, which are more readily excreted by the kidney? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the major catalytic complex of Phase I? |
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Definition
mixed function oxidase system which is situated on the smooth endoplasmic reticulum |
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Term
What is the most important enzyme system? |
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Definition
Cytochrome P-450, which utilizes molecular oxygen |
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Term
What is liver's crucial role with foreign substances? |
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Definition
deactivating ingested foreign substances |
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Term
What is the only common structural feature of substrate? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the reducing agents in drug metabolism? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the two main enzymes and what do they do? |
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Definition
cytochrome P450 and flavoprotein (NADPH-cyt. P450 reductase)
They are sources of electrons for the oxidative reaction |
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Term
Which enzyme is teh rate-limiting step? |
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Definition
NADPH-cyt. P450 reductase |
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Term
What is Step 1 of Mixed function oxidase reaction? |
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Definition
Substrate reacts with oxidized (Fe3+) form of P450 |
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Term
What is Step 2 of Mixed function oxidase reaction?
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Definition
Reductase accepts an electron from NADPH and reduces the P450-drug complex |
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Term
What is Step 3 of Mixed function oxidase reaction?
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Definition
Reduced (Fe2+) P450-drug complex reacts with oxygen and a second electron to form an activated dioxygen species |
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Term
What is Step 4 of Mixed function oxidase reaction?
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Definition
One atom of the activated oxygen is transferred to the drug substrate to form an oxidized product; the other oxygen atom is released as H2O |
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Term
How does the conjugation of drug or phase I metabolite coupled to an endogenous substrate take place? |
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Definition
glucuronidation
sulfation
acetylation
amino acid conjugation
glutathione conjugation |
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Term
Which one of the Phase II conjugation is the most important? |
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Definition
Glucuronidation - addition of glucuronic acid to a substrate |
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Term
What is the goal of Phase II? |
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Definition
transform drugs and metabolites to inactive products –
less lipid soluble AND highly ionized
Therefore easily excreted |
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Term
What is the first-pass effect / presystemic metabolism? |
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Definition
Metabolism of the absorbed drug in the liver via hepatic portal blood that have been absorbed from the stomach and intestine |
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Term
What happens to first-pass elimination when a liver is diseased? |
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Definition
Liver cell function is impaired and there are through-channels which shunt blood into the systemic circulation.
This means that first-pass elimination is reduced and exaggerated responses to normal doses of drug will occur |
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Term
Why would some drugs inhibit cytochrome P-450? |
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Definition
To enhance the action of a drug that is metabolized by this enzyme |
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Term
What happens during chronic use of certain drugs? |
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Definition
induce liver enzymes, enhance gene transcription that leads to increased levels of microsomal monooxygenases
Thus inducer itself and many other drugs are more rapidly metabolized |
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Term
What are examples of inducers? |
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Definition
phenobarbitone, ethanol, phenylbutazone and rifampicin |
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Term
What does induction of drug metabolism contribute to? |
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Definition
variability of drug response in the population/drug tolerance
greater toxicity of paracetamol in regular heavy drinkers due to increased production of hepatotoxic metabolites
failure of medication
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Term
What is the biotransformation rate in fetus? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens to the metabolizing capacity of drugs with age? |
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Definition
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Term
How are most deficiencies of drug metabolism inherited? |
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Definition
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Term
Where do liver concentrate drug conjugate? |
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Definition
liver can concentrate drug conjugates in the bile, which is then passed in the intestine |
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Term
Explain enterohepatic circulation |
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Definition
Hydrolysis of the conjugate may occur and the active drug is reabsorbed and may go round the cycle again.
This creates a reservoir of drug, which tends to prolong the duration of action of the drug |
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Term
What factors influence bile excretion of drug? |
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Definition
Biliary excretion influenced by MW and polarity |
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Term
Compare teh compounds excreted by liver and kidney |
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Definition
Compounds excreted in the bile are usually larger than those excreted by the kidney |
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Term
How are cations excreted? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the three processes that account for the way the kidney excretes drugs? |
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Definition
1. glomerular filtration
2. passive reabsorption
3. active tubular secretion or reabsorption |
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Term
Describe excretion of glomerular filtration |
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Definition
all drugs in free solution in plasma readily pass into the glomerular filtrate, but high plasma protein binding of a drug reduces its clearance by filtration |
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Term
How are glomerular filtrate reabsorbed during passive reabsorption of kidney? |
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Definition
glomerular filtrate pass into tubular cells and then into the peritubular capillaries |
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Term
Describe the drug that can be reabsorbed during passive reabsorption of kidney |
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Definition
Lipid soluble
Highly polar drugs will not be reabsorbed and will be concentrated in urine |
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Term
What does the reabsorption of weak acid and base depend on? |
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Definition
reabsorption will depend on the pH of the tubular fluid |
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Term
What type of pH condition will weak acid be rapidly excreted? |
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Definition
Weak acids are more rapidly excreted when the tubular fluid is alkaline, since this promotes ionization and the ionized species will not be reabsorbed |
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Term
What happens to the drug that are not filtered at glomerulus? |
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Definition
Passes into the capillaries surrounding the proximal tubule |
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Term
How are drugs not filtered at glomerulus excreted? |
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Definition
Via active transport into the tubular lumen
Thus achieve maximal drug clearance since loss of
free drug from the plasma is replaced by protein-bound drug |
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Term
What are ways to accelerate excretion of drug? |
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Definition
Forced alkaline diuresis
Peritoneal dialysis
Hemodialysis |
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Term
What is Forced alkaline diuresis? |
|
Definition
diuretic drug and an infusion of sodium bicarbonate to increase tubular fluid pH to excrete acidic drug |
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Term
What is Peritoneal dialysis? |
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Definition
placing fluid in the peritoneal cavity to promote passage of drug from intestinal blood vessels into the fluid.
The fluid is then drained |
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Term
What is more efficient than peritoneal dialysis? |
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Definition
Hemodialysis and hemoperfusion |
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Term
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Definition
Patient's blood is passed over a semi-permeable membrane of large surface area and then returned to the patient.
The drug diffuses through the membrane into a physiological salt solution that can be replaced |
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Term
What type of drug does hemodialysis work the best? |
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Definition
low molecular weight drugs of moderate and high water solubility |
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Term
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Definition
Patient's blood is passed through a column of resin or coated charcoal to bind the drug. |
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Term
What types of drug does hemoperfusion work the best with? |
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Definition
The method gives better results for drugs/poisons that are lipophilic, of large molecular weight, and tightly bound to plasma proteins |
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Term
What is the problem with hemoperfusion? |
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Definition
Platelet aggregation in the column |
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Term
What are the factors of drug response variation? |
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Definition
i) Faulty dosage forms
ii) Ethnic differences
iii) Age/sex
iv) Enzyme induction
v) Alteration in receptor density
vi) Disease |
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