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الكلية كلية الطب
القسم الادوية
المرحلة 3
أستاذ المادة ماجد كاظم عباس عليوي
24/05/2017 16:49:24
lecture 2 pharmacokinetic bioavailability bioavailability is the rate and extent to which an administered drug reaches the systemic circulation. for example, if 100 mg of a drug is administered orally and 70 mg is absorbed unchanged, the bioavailability is 0.7 or 70%. determining bioavailability is important for calculating drug dosages for nonintravenous routes of administration determination of bioavailability: bioavailability is determined by comparing plasma levels of a drug after a particular route of administration (for example, oral administration) with levels achieved by iv administration. after iv administration, 100% of the drug rapidly enters the circulation. when the drug is given orally, only part of the administered dose appears in the plasma. by plotting plasma concentrations of the drug versus time, the area under the curve (auc) can be measured. the total auc reflects the extent of absorption of the drug. bioavailability of a drug given orally is the ratio of the auc following oral administration to the auc following iv administration (assuming iv and oral doses are equivalent figure 1.10). . factors that influence bioavailability: in contrast to iv administration, which confers 100% bioavailability, orally administered drugs often undergo first-pass metabolism. this biotransformation, in addition to the chemical and physical characteristics of the drug, determines the rate and extent to which the agent reaches the systemic circulation. a. first-pass hepatic metabolism: when a drug is absorbed from the gi tract, it enters the portal circulation before entering the systemic circulation (figure 1.11). if the drug is rapidly metabolized in the liver or gut wall during this initial passage, the amount of unchanged drug entering the systemic circulation is decreased. this is referred to as first-pass metabolism. [note: first-pass metabolism by the intestine or liver limits the efficacy of many oral medications. for example, more than 90% of nitroglycerin is cleared during first-pass metabolism. hence, it is primarily administered via the sublingual or transdermal route.] drugs with high first-pass metabolism should be given in doses sufficient to ensure that enough active drug reaches the desired site of action. b. solubility of the drug: very hydropinghilic drugs are poorly absorbed because of their inability to cross lipid-rich cell membranes. paradoxically, drugs that are extremely lipophilic are also poorly absorbed, because they are totally insoluble in aqueous body fluids and, therefore, cannot gain access to the surface of cells. for a drug to be readily absorbed, it must be largely lipophilic, yet have some solubility in aqueous solutions. this is one reason why many drugs are either weak acids or weak bases. c. chemical instability: some drugs, such as penicillin g, are unstable in the ph of the gastric contents. others, such as insulin, are destroyed in the gi tract by degradative enzymes. d. nature of the drug formulation: drug absorption may be altered by factors unrelated to the chemistry of the drug. for example, particle size, salt form, crystal polymorphism, enteric coatings, and the presence of excipients (such as binders and dispersing agents) can influence the ease of dissolution and, therefore, alter the rate of absorption . drug distribution drug distribution is the process by which a drug reversibly leaves the bloodstream and enters the interstitium (extracellular fluid) and the tissues. for drugs administered iv, absorption is not a factor, and the initial phase (from immediately after administration through the rapid fall in concentration) represents the distribution phase, during which the drug rapidly leaves the circulation and enters the tissues . the distribution of a drug from the plasma to the interstitium depends on cardiac output and local blood flow, capillary permeability, the tissue volume, the degree of binding of the drug to plasma and tissue proteins, and the relative lipophilicity of the drug. blood flow the rate of blood flow to the tissue capillaries varies widely. for instance, blood flow to the “vessel-rich organs” (brain, liver, and kidney) is greater than that to the skeletal muscles. adipose tissue, skin, and viscera have still lower rates of blood flow. variation in blood flow partly explains the short duration of hypnosis produced by an iv bolus of propofol . high blood flow, together with high lipophilicity of propofol, permits rapid distribution into the cns and produces anesthesia. a subsequent slower distribution to skeletal muscle and adipose tissue lowers the plasma concentration so that the drug diffuses out of the cns, down the concentration gradient, and consciousness is regained. capillary permeability capillary permeability is determined by capillary structure and by the chemical nature of the drug. capillary structure varies in terms of the fraction of the basement membrane exposed by slit junctions between endothelial cells. in the liver and spleen, a significant portion of the basement membrane is exposed due to large, discontinuous capillaries through which large plasma proteins can pass . in the brain, the capillary structure is continuous, and there are no slit junctions to enter the brain, drugs must pass through the endothelial cells of the cns capillaries or be actively transported. for example, a specific transporter carries levodopa into the brain. by contrast, lipid-soluble drugs readily penetrate the cns because they dissolve in the endothelial cell membrane. ionized or polar drugs generally fail to enter the cns because they cannot pass through the endothelial cells that have no slit junctions . these closely juxtaposed cells form tight junctions that constitute the blood–brain barrier. binding of drugs to plasma proteins and tissues 1. binding to plasma proteins: reversible binding to plasma proteins sequesters drugs in a nondiffusible form and slows their transfer out of the vascular compartment. albumin is the major drug-binding protein and may act as a drug reservoir (as the concentration of free drug decreases due to elimination, the bound drug dissociates from the protein). this maintains the freedrug concentration as a constant fraction of the total drug in the plasma. 2. binding to tissue proteins: many drugs accumulate in tissues, leading to higher concentrations in tissues than in the extracellular fluid and blood. drugs may accumulate as a result of binding to lipids, proteins, or nucleic acids. drugs may also be actively transported into tissues. tissue reservoirs may serve as a major source of the drug and prolong its actions or cause local drug toxicity. (for example, acrolein, the metabolite of cyclophosphamide, can cause hemorrhagic cystitis because it accumulates in the bladder.) . lipophilicity the chemical nature of a drug strongly influences its ability to cross cell membranes. lipophilic drugs readily move across most biologic membranes. these drugs dissolve in the lipid membranes and penetrate the entire cell surface. the major factor influencing the distribution of lipophilic drugs is blood flow to the area. in contrast, hydropinghilic drugs do not readily penetrate cell membranes and must pass through slit junctions.
المادة المعروضة اعلاه هي مدخل الى المحاضرة المرفوعة بواسطة استاذ(ة) المادة . وقد تبدو لك غير متكاملة . حيث يضع استاذ المادة في بعض الاحيان فقط الجزء الاول من المحاضرة من اجل الاطلاع على ما ستقوم بتحميله لاحقا . في نظام التعليم الالكتروني نوفر هذه الخدمة لكي نبقيك على اطلاع حول محتوى الملف الذي ستقوم بتحميله .
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