Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed,...

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Definitions • Pharmacokinetics The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the body • Pharmacodynamics The interactions of a drug and the receptors responsible for its action in the body and CNS
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Transcript of Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed,...

Page 1: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Definitions

• Pharmacokinetics– The process by which a drug is administered,

absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the body

• Pharmacodynamics– The interactions of a drug and the receptors responsible

for its action in the body and CNS

Page 2: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Drug Administration

• Orally (swallowed)

• through Mucus Membranes– Oral Mucosa (e.g. sublingual)

– Nasal Mucosa (e.g. insufflated)

• Rectally (suppository)

Page 3: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Drug Administration (cont.)

• Parenterally (injection)– Intravenous (IV)

– Intramuscular (IM)

– Subcutaneous (SC)

– Intraperitoneal (IP)

• Inhaled (through lungs)

Page 4: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Drug Administration (cont.)

• Topical/Transdermal (through skin)

• Directly into CNS– Intracranial or intracerebral (into brain

tissue)

– Intracerebroventricular (into brain ventricles)

Page 5: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Drug Administration Summary

• Pharmacokinetics relates to bioavailability– The fraction of an

administered dose of a drug that reaches the blood stream

• How quickly a drug reaches its site of action relates to “addictiveness.”

Page 6: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Distribution: Solubility

• Water-soluble– Ionized (have electrical charge)

– Crosses through pores in capillaries, but not cell membranes

– The extent of ionization of a drug is expresses as the pKa of the drug

• Lipid(fat)-soluble– Non-ionized (no electrical charge)

– Crosses pores, cell membranes, blood-brain-barrier

Page 7: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.
Page 8: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Distribution: Blood Brain Barrier

Page 9: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.
Page 10: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Depot Binding

• Drugs bind to “depot sites” or “silent receptors”

• Deposits slow elimination, can increase drug detection window

Page 11: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Metabolism & Elimination

• Kidneys– Traps water-soluble

compounds for elimination via urine

• Liver– Enzymes transform drugs

into more water-soluble metabolites

Page 12: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Metabolism and Elimination (cont.)

• Half-lives and Kinetics– Half-life:

• Plasma half-life: Time it takes for plasma concentration of a drug to drop by 50%.

• Whole body half-life: Time it takes to eliminate half of the body content of a drug.

– Factors affecting half-life• age

• renal excretion

• liver metabolism

• protein binding

Page 13: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

First order kinetics

A constant fraction of drug is eliminated per unit of time.

When drug concentration is high, rate of disappearanceis high.

Page 14: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Zero order kinetics

Rate of elimination is constant.

Rate of elimination is independent of drug concentration.

Constant amount eliminated per unit of time.

Example: Alcohol

Page 15: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

The Dose-Response Curve

• X-axis = Dose

• Y-axis = Response, measured as either– magnitude of response in individual

– number/percentage of individuals responding at a given level

Page 16: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Therapeutic Index

• ED50 = dose at which 50% population shows response

• LD50 =dose at which 50% population dies

• TI = LD50/ED50, an indication of safety of a drug (higher is better)

Page 17: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Potency

• Relative strength of response for a given dose– accessability, affinity, and efficacy

• D-R curve shifts left with greater potency

Page 18: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Efficacy(% of maximal change elicited)

• Maximum possible effect

• Indicated by peak of D-R curve

Page 19: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Tolerance(desensitization)

• Decreased response to same dose with repeated exposure

• or more drug needed to achieve same effect

• Right-ward shift of D-R curve

• Sometimes occurs in an acute dose (e.g. alcohol)

• Can develop across drugs (cross-tolerance)

• Caused by compensatory mechanisms that oppose the effects of the drug

Page 20: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Tolerance

• Physical – User requires more of the drug to achieve the same

effect, and the same amount will produce a lesser effect.

• Psychological– As the user becomes familiar with the drug’s effects,

s/he learns tricks to hide or counteract the effects.

• Metabolic– The user is able to break down and/or excrete the drug

more quickly due to repeated exposure.

Page 21: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Sensitization

• Increased response to same dose with repeated exposure

• or less drug needed to achieve same effect

• Left-ward shift in D-R curve

• Sometimes occurs in an acute dose (e.g. amphetamine)

• Can develop across drugs (cross-sensitization)

Page 22: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Mechanisms of Tolerance and Sensitization

• Pharmacokinetic– changes in drug availability at site of action; metabolic changes

• Pharmacodynamic– changes in drug-receptor interaction (G-protein uncoupling; down

regulation)

• Conditioning– automatic physiological change in response to cues

• Motivational– change in organism’s behavior to attenuate/increase effect

Page 23: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Pharmacodynamics

• Receptor– target/site of drug action (e.g. genetically-coded proteins embedded

in neural membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus)– Lock and key model

• Drug acts as key, receptor as lock, combination yields response

Page 24: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Pharmacodynamics continued

• Affinity– propensity of a drug to bind with a receptor

• Selectivity– specific affinity for certain receptors (vs. others)

Page 25: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Agonism and Antagonism

Agonists facilitate receptor response

Antagonists inhibit receptor response

(direct ant/agonists)

Page 26: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Agonists

• Full Agonist

• Partial Agonist

• Direct/Competitive Agonist

• Indirect/Noncompetitive Agonist

Page 27: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Antagonists

• Direct/Competitive Antagonist

• Indirect/Noncompetitive Antagonist

• Inverse Agonist

Page 28: Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.

Important implications ofdrug-receptor interaction

• drugs can potentially alter rate of any bodily/brain function

• drugs cannot impart entirely new functions to cells

• drugs do not create effects, only modify ongoing ones

• drugs can allow for effects outside of normal physiological range