Lab-3 practical pharmacology

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Karunya Kandimalla, Ph.D
Advertisements

PHARMACOKINETIC MODELS
Instant Clinical Pharmacology E.J. Begg
First, zero, pseudo-zero order elimination Clearance
PHARMACOKINETIC.
DISPOSITION OF DRUGS The disposition of chemicals entering the body (from C.D. Klaassen, Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology, 5th ed., New York: McGraw-Hill,
SEMINAR ON NONCOMPARTMENTAL PHARMACOKINETICS
Pharmacokinetics of Drug Absorption
Nonlinear pharmacokinetics
One-compartment open model: Intravenous bolus administration
Week 3 - Biopharmaceutics and Pharmacokinetics
Laplace transformation
Practical Pharmacokinetics
Week 4 - Biopharmaceutics and Pharmacokinetics
Dose Adjustment in Renal and Hepatic Disease
Toxicokinetic Calculations
Gokaraju Rangaraju College of Pharmacy
INTRAVENOUS INFUSION.
VM 8314 Dr. Jeff Wilcke Pharmacokinetic Modeling (describing what happens)
CLEARANCE CONCEPTS Text: Applied Biopharm. & PK
Quantitative Pharmacokinetics
The General Concepts of Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics Hartmut Derendorf, PhD University of Florida.
PHARMACOKINETICS 1. Fate of drugs in the body 1.1 absorption
Pharmacokinetics Introduction
PLASMA HALF LIFE ( t 1/2 ).  Minimum Effective Concentration (MEC): The plasma drug concentration below which a patient’s response is too small for clinical.
PHARMACOKINETIC MODELS
Drug Administration Pharmacokinetic Phase (Time course of ADME processes) Absorption Distribution Pharmaceutical Phase Disintegration of the Dosage Form.
One Compartment Open Model IV bolus
The General Concepts of Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
Multiple dosing: intravenous bolus administration
Noncompartmental Models. Introduction The noncompartmental approach for data analysis does not require any specific compartmental model for the system.
Clinical Pharmacokinetics Fundamental hypothesis: a relationship exists between the pharmacological or toxic response to a drug and the accessible concentration.
1. Fate of drugs in the body 1.1 absorption 1.2 distribution - volume of distribution 1.3 elimination - clearance 2. The half-life and its uses 3. Repeated.
Continuous intravenous infusion (one-compartment model)
Excretion of Drugs By the end of this lecture, students should be able to Identify main and minor routes of Excretion including renal elimination and biliary.
INTRODUCTION CLINICAL PHARMACOKINETICS
1 Pharmacokinetics: Introduction Dr Mohammad Issa.
Principles of pharmacokinetics Prof. Kršiak Department of Pharmacology, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague Cycle II, Subject: General.
PHT 415 BASIC PHARMACOKINETICS
The General Concepts of Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
Clearance and Renal Excretion Dr. Basavaraj K. Nanjwade M. Pharm., Ph. D Department of Pharmaceutics Faculty of Pharmacy Omer Al-Mukhtar University Tobruk,
Learning objectives To know what data is available from pharmacokinetic studies in man and how to handle it To know how to calculate the basic pharmacokinetic.
1 CHAPTER 2 DEFINITIONS RELATED TO PHARMACOKINETICS.
DOSAGE ADJUSTMENT IN RENAL AND HEPATIC DISEASES Course Title : Biopharmaceutics and Pharmacokinetics – II Course Teacher : Zara Sheikh.
Pharmacokinetics 3rd Lecture
Source: Frank M. Balis Concentration and Effect vs. Time Conc./ Amount Effect [% of E MAX ] Time Central Compartment Peripheral Compartment Effect Compartment.
Allie punke Pharmacokinetics tutoring Fall 2016
Physiology for Engineers
Allie punke Pharmacokinetics tutoring Fall 2016
Chapter 7 COMPARTMENT MODELS
Lecture-8 Biopharmaceutics
Pharmacokinetic Modeling (describing what happens)
Applications of Pharmacokinetics
Quantitative Pharmacokinetics
Pharmaceutics 2.
Kinetics, Modeling Oct 19, 2009 Casarett and Doull,
Kinetics, Modeling Oct 15, 2006 Casarett and Doull,
Clinical Pharmacokinetics
School of Pharmacy, University of Nizwa
Clinical Pharmacokinetics
Hawler Medical University
1 Concentration-time curve
Biopharmaceutics Chapter-6
Hawler Medical University
School of Pharmacy, University of Nizwa
Therapeutic Drug Monitoring chapter 1 part 1
Introduction to Pharmacology
1-C: Renal and Hepatic Elimination
Q1: Drug A is a small and hydrophilic compound that distributes to extracellular fluids only. It has a volume of distribution of 5.6 L in a healthy 70-kg.
Presentation transcript:

Lab-3 practical pharmacology 2010-2011

Clinical parameters in drug pharmacokinetics:-  

pharmacokinetics: The processes to which the drug undergone during its movement through the body. ( i.e. how the body handles the drug)

Absorption:

1-Bioavailability Bioavailability is the fraction of administered drug that reaches the systemic circulation in a chemically unchanged form

Important to decide which rout is suitable to administer a given drug Clinical importance Important to decide which rout is suitable to administer a given drug

Area under the curve(for IV) (Auc(IV)):- AUC (iv)= C0 / Ke C0= concentration at zero time  Ke=elimination rate constant

2-The half-life percent is the time required for the drug concentration to change by fifty percent. the t1/2 of a drug depends upon 2 important factors:- a-Apparent volume of distribution(AVd). b-Clearance of drug(CL). percent

Clinical importance important to be Known for drugs in which drug conc. Is closely related to the pharmacological effects e.g: phenytoin. So used to predict the maximal effects both on initiation and on termination of therapy. *It is of less value in drugs of which the effects are poorly related to plasma conc. e.g: diazepam

-AVd is apparent volume of distribution of a drug t1/2= (o.693*avd)/ cl -AVd is apparent volume of distribution of a drug -CL the drug clearance from the body.( see interactive pharm.)  

3-Volume of Distribution The volume of distribution is a hypothetical volume of fluid into which a drug is dispersed. Although the volume of distribution has no physiologic or physical basis, it is sometimes useful to compare the distribution of a drug with the volumes of the water compartments in the body.

-The apparent volume of distribution assumes that the drug distributes uniformly, in a single compartment. However, most drugs distribute unevenly, in several compartments, and the volume of distribution does not describe a real, physical volume, but rather, reflects the ratio of drug in the extraplasmic spaces relative to the plasma space.

Avd= amount of drug (dose)/ Co Co = Auc*Ke

4-Elimination rate constant (Ke): is the amount of drug lost per unit time. Ke= o.693/t1/2 T1/2=o693/Ke  

Clinical application (t1/2) and is related to ke by the equation t1/2 = 0.693/Ke . The two parameters, together with the initial concentration co, describe a first-order (exponential) rate process. The constancy of the process permits calculation of the plasma volume that would be cleared of drug,

5-Clearance(cl):- The total body (systemic) clearance, CLtotal or CLt, is the sum of the clearances from the various drug-metabolizing and drug eliminating organs.

The kidney is often the major organ of excretion; however, the liver also contributes to drug loss through metabolism and/or excretion into the bile. A patient in renal failure may sometimes benefit from a drug that is excreted by this pathway, into the intestine and feces, rather than through the kidney. Some drugs may also be reabsorbed through the enterohepatic circulation, thus prolonging their half-life.(see interactive pharma.)

CL total= CL hepatic + CL renal+ CL pulmonary+CL others CL total= CL hepatic + CL renal+ CL pulmonary+CL others. It is not possible to measure and sum these individual clearances. How- ever, total clearance can be derived from the steadystate equation: CL total= rate of elimination/ Css Css is conc.at steady state.

6-Steady state Steady-state drug levels in blood: Following the initiation of an IV infusion, the plasma concentration of drug rises until the rate of drug eliminated from the body precisely balances the input rate. Thus, a steady-state is achieved in which the plasma concentration of drug remains constant.

it means that dosing rate= eliminating rate (DR=ER) *it means that dosing rate= eliminating rate (DR=ER). * 5 t1/2 needed to achieve Css and 5 t1/2 to eliminate drug from steady state.(see interactive pharma).

7-Amount of drug present in body at any time(at certain conc.):- Amount of drug at any time = drug conc * AVd Dose at any time= Css * AVd.

summery 1-T1/2= 0.693*avd/ cl T1/2=0.693/Ke 2-bioavailability=AUC(oral)/AUC(IV) 3-AUC= Co/Ke 4-Ke=o.693/t1/2 5-avd=dose/Co 6-Cltotal=avd*Ke 7- amount of drug at any time=drug conc*avd Or Css*avd