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Lecture 8. The body is a container in which a drug is distributed by blood (different flow to different organs) - but the body is not homogeneous. Factors.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 8. The body is a container in which a drug is distributed by blood (different flow to different organs) - but the body is not homogeneous. Factors."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 8

2 The body is a container in which a drug is distributed by blood (different flow to different organs) - but the body is not homogeneous. Factors affecting drug delivery from the plasma: A- blood flow: kidney and liver higher than skeletal muscles and adipose tissues. B- capillary permeability: 1- capillary structure: blood brain barrier 2- drug structure C- binding of drugs to plasma proteins and tissue proteins

3 Vd = Amount of drug in the body Plasma drug concentration V D = Dose/Plasma Concentration  It is hypothetical volume of fluid in which the drug is disseminated.  Units: L and L/Kg  We consider the volume of fluid in the body = 60% of BW  60 X 70/100 = 42 L

4  Drugs may distribute into  Plasma (Vascular) Compartment:  Too large mol wt  Extensive plasma protein binding  Heparin is an example  Extracellular Fluid Low mol wt drugs able to move via endothelial slits to interstitial water Hydrophilic drugs cannot cross cell membrane to the intracellular water  Total Body Water; Low mol wt hydrophobic drugs distribute from interstitial water to intracellular Plasma (4 litres) Interstitial Fluid (11 litres) Intracellular Fluid (28 litres) 4

5 Plasma Compartment Extracellular Compartment Intracellular Compartment Drug has large Mol. Wt. OR Bind extensively to pp Vd = 4L 6% of BW e.g. Heparin Drug has low Mol. Wt. Hydrophilic Distributed in plasma & Interstitial fluid Vd = 14L 21% of BW e.g. Aminoglycosides Drug has low Mol. Wt. Hydrophobic Distributed in three comp. Accumulated in fat Pass BBB Vd= 42L 60% of BW e.g. Ethanol

6 Plasma protein binding  Many drugs bind reversibly to plasma proteins especially albumin  D + Albumin↔ D-Albumin (Inactive) + Free D  Only free drug can distribute, binds to receptors, metabolized and excreted.

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8 Clinical Significance of Albumin Biding  Class I: dose < available albumin binding sites (most drugs)  Class II: dose > albumin binding sites (e.g., sulfonamide)  Drugs of class II displace Class I drug molecules from binding sites→ more therapeutic/toxic effect  In some disease states → change of plasma protein binding  In uremic patients, plasma protein binding to acidic drugs is reduced  Plasma protein binding prolongs duration Sulfonamide 8 Displacement of Class-I Drug

9 1000 molecules % bound molecules free 999 950 50 1 100-fold increase in free pharmacologically active concentration at site of action. Effective TOXIC

10  Capillary permeability  Endothelial cells of capillaries in tissues other than brain have wide slit junctions allowing easy movement of drugs  Brain capillaries have no slits between endothelial cells, i.e tight junction or blood brain barrier  Only carrier-mediated transport or highly lipophilic drugs enter CNS  Ionised or hydrophilic drugs can’t get into the brain Liver capillary Endothelial cells Glial cell 10 Brain capillary Slit junctions Tight junctions

11  Blood-Brain barrier: Inflammation during meningitis or encephalitis may increase permeability into the BBB of ionised & lipid-insol drugs  Placental Barrier: Drugs that cross this barrier reaches fetal circulation Placental barrier is similar to BBB where only lipophilic drugs can cross placental barrier 11

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13 It is enzyme catalyzed conversion of drugs to their metabolites. Process by which the drug is altered and broken down into smaller substances (metabolites) that are usually inactive. Lipid-soluble drugs become more water soluble, so they may be more readily excreted.

14  Most of drug biotransformation takes place in the liver, but drug metabolizing enzymes are found in many other tissues, including the gut, kidneys, brain, lungs and skin.  Metabolism aims to detoxify the substance but may activate some drugs (pro-drugs). 

15 Conversion of Lipophyllic molecules Into more polar molecules by oxidation, reduction and hydrolysis reactions Phase I Phase II Conjugation with certain substrate ↑↓or unchanged Pharmacological Activity Inactive compounds

16  Oxidative reactions: Catalyzed mainly by family of enzymes; microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP) monoxygenase system. Drug + O 2 + NADPH + H + → Drug modified + H 2 O + NADP +  Many CYP isoenzymes have been identified, each one responsible for metabolism of specific drugs. At least there are 3 CYP families and each one has subfamilies e.g. CYP3A.  Many drugs alter drug metabolism by inhibiting (e.g. cimetidine) or inducing CYP enzymes (e.g. phenobarbital & rifampin).  Pharmacogenomics

17  Oxidative reactions: A few drugs are oxidised by cytoplasmic enzymes. ◦ Ethanol is oxidized by alcohol dehydrogenase ◦ Caffeine and theophylline are metabolized by xanthine oxidase ◦ Monoamine oxidase  Hydrolytic reactions: Esters and amides are hydrolyzed by: ◦ Cholineesterase  Reductive reactions: It is less common. ◦ Hepatic nitro reductase (chloramphenicol) ◦ Glutathione-organic nitrate reductase (NTG)

18  Drug molecules undergo conjugation reactions with an endogenous substrate such as acetate, glucuronate, sulfate or glycine to form water-soluble metabolites.  Except for microsomal glucuronosyltransferase, these enzyems are located in cytoplasm.  Most conjugated drug metabolites are pharmacologically inactive. ◦ Glucuronide formation: The most common using a glucuronate molecule. ◦ Acetylation by N-acetyltransferase that utilizes acetyl-Co-A as acetate donar. ◦ Sulfation by sulfotransferase. Sulfation of minoxidil and triamterene are active drugs.

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20  Excretion is the removal of drug from body fluids and occurs primarily in the urine.  Other routes of excretion from the body include in bile, sweat, saliva, tears, feces, breast, milk and exhaled air.

21 LONGITUDNAL SECTION OF KIDNEY 21

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23  Glomerular filtration depends on:  Renal blood flow & GFR; direct relationship  Plasma protein binding; only free unbound drugs are filtered  Tubular Secretion in the proximal renal tubule mediates raising drug concentration in PCT lumen Organic anionic & cationic transporters (OAT & OCT) mediate active secretion of anionic & cationic drugs Passive diffusion of uncharged drugs Facilitated diffusion of charged & uncharged drugs Penicillin is an example of actively secreted drugs 23

24  Tubular re-absorption in DCT:  Because of water re-absorption, urinary D concentration increases towards DCT favoring passive diffusion of un- ionized lipophillic drugs  It leads to lowering urinary drug concentration o Urinary pH trapping:  Chemical adjustment of urinary pH can inhibit or enhance tubular drug reabsorption  For example, aspirin overdose can be treated by urine alkalinization with Na Bicarbonate (ion trapping) and increasing urine flow rate (dilution of tubular drug concentration)  Ammonium chloride can be used as urine acidifier for basic drug overdose treatment 24

25  Pulmonary excretion of drugs into expired air:  Gases & volatile substances are excreted by this route  No specialized transporters are involved  Simple diffusion across cell membrane predominates. It depends on: Drug solubility in blood: more soluble gases are slowly excreted Cardiac output rise enhance removal of gaseous drugs Respiratory rate is of importance for gases of high blood solubility  Biliary excretion of few drugs into feces o Such drugs are secreted from the liver into the bile by active transporters, and then into duodenum o Examples: digoxin, steroid hormones, some anticancer agents o Some drugs undergo enterohepatic circulation back into systemic circulation

26 CLEARANCE:- Is defined as the hypothetical volume of body fluids containing drug from which the drug is removed/ cleared completely in a specific period of time. Expressed in ml/min. CL = kV D, k: elimination rate constant CLEARANCE:- Is defined as the hypothetical volume of body fluids containing drug from which the drug is removed/ cleared completely in a specific period of time. Expressed in ml/min. CL = kV D, k: elimination rate constant 09-12-2010 26KLECOP, Nipani

27  It is ability of kidney, liver and other organs to eliminate drug from the bloodstream  Units are in L/hr or L/hr/kg  Used in determination of maintenance doses  Drug metabolism and excretion are often referred to collectively as clearance  The endpoint is reduction of drug plasma level  Hepatic, renal and cardiac failure can each reduce drug clearance and hence increase elimination T 1/2 of the drug 27

28  Half-life: is a derived parameter, completely determined by volume of distribution and clearance.  (Units = time)  As Vd increases t1/2 increases


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