Drug Absorption and Distribution Flashcards

1
Q

What are some factors affecting drug absorption?

A

solubility
chemical stability
lipid to water partition coefficient
degree of ionisation

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2
Q

How does lipid water partition coefficient affect drug absorption?

A

a large partition coefficient shows that the drug is readily absorbed in a lipid membrane

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3
Q

What form of drug readily diffuse across the lipid bilayer?

A

unionised forms of a drug

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4
Q

What does the degree of ionisation depend upon?

A

the pKa of the drug and local pH

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5
Q

What is the equation used to calculate the proportion of ionised and unionised drug?

A

Henderson-Hasselbach

pKa - pH = log(HA/A)

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6
Q

Where does the majority of drug absorption occur?

A

the intestine - even for weak acids

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7
Q

What types of drug are poorly absorbed?

A

strong acids and bases

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8
Q

When are acidic drugs less ionised?

A

in an acidic environment

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9
Q

When are basic drugs less ionised?

A

in a basic environment

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10
Q

What are the gastrointestinal factors that affect absorption?

A
the GI motility
pH at the absorption site
blood flow to the stomach and intestines
the way the tablet is manufactured
physiochemical interactions - i.e. rate of absorption is modified by calcium rich foods
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11
Q

What is the oral availability?

A

the amount in the systemic circulation/amount administered

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12
Q

What is systemic availability?

A

the amount in the systemic circulation/amount absorbed

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13
Q

What affects systemic availability?

A

first-pass metabolism

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14
Q

What are the possible routes of drug administration?

A
oral
inhalational
sublingual
transdermal
IV
rectal
Intramuscular
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15
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of oral administration?

A
\+convenient
\+good absorption
-inactivation through first pass
-absorption variable
-GI irritation
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16
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of sublingual administration?

A

+bypasses portal system
+ avoids gastric acid
- infrequent route
- few preparations available

17
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of rectal administration?

A

+ by passes portal system
+ avoids gastric acid
- infrequent route
- people are squeamish

18
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of IV administration?

A
\+ rapid onset
\+ continuous infusion
\+ complete availability
\+ route for drugs that cause local tissue damage
- sterile preparation
- risk of sepsis
- high levels of drug at heart
19
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of intramuscular administration?

A
\+ rapid onset of lipid soluble
\+ slow prolonged release
- painful
- tissue damage
- absorption variable
20
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of inhalational administration?

A

+ suited to lungs
+ good for volatile agents
+ good for local effect

21
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of topical administration?

A

+ ideal for local effect

22
Q

What form of drug can pass between interstitial, intracellular and plasma water?

A

unbound and unionised

23
Q

What form of drug can pass between transcellular water and fat?

A

unionised

24
Q

What is the equation for the volume of distribution?

A

Vd=dose/plasma conc.

25
Q

What does a Vd less than 5L imply?

A

drug is retained in the vascular compartment or too large to cross capillary wall i.e. haparin

26
Q

What does a Vd less than 15L imply?

A

the drug is restricted to the extracellular water - i.e. permanently charged compounds - tubocurarine

27
Q

What does a Vd greater than 15L imply?

A

distribution throughout total body water or concentration in certain tissues i.e. ethanol - lipid soluble drugs