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Kinetics, Modeling Oct 19, 2009 Casarett and Doull,

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Presentation on theme: "Kinetics, Modeling Oct 19, 2009 Casarett and Doull,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Kinetics, Modeling Oct 19, 2009 Casarett and Doull,
6th Edn, Chapter 7, pp 7th Edn, Chapter 7, pp Timbrell, Chapter 3, pp (3rd Edn)

2 Exposure - Dose External exposure – ambient air, water
Dose received by body Dose at target organ Dose at target tissue Dose at target molecule Molecular dose

3

4 Exposure – Dose How are they related. Can we measure them
Exposure – Dose How are they related ? Can we measure them ? How can we describe the crucial steps so that we can estimate what we can’t measure?

5 Modeling and Kinetics Mathematical descriptors of movement of chemicals into and out of the body Consider the kinetics of the important steps/processes Diffusion Enzyme-catalyzed Carrier-mediated

6 Enzymes: Biological catalysts
Proteins May have metals at active site Act on “substrate” May use/require co-factors

7 Kinetics of Enzyme-catalyzed Reactions
Michaelis-Menten Equation: v = Vmax * [S] Km + [S] First-order where Km >> [S] Zero-order where [S] >> Km

8 Zero-Order Processes Follow straight-line time course
Rate is independent of concentration v = δ[A]/δt = k Units of k are mass/time, e.g mg/h Saturated carrier-mediated processes Saturated enzyme-mediated processes

9 First-Order Processes
Follow exponential time course Rate is concentration-dependent v = [A]/t = k[A] Units of k are 1/time, e.g. h-1 Unsaturated carrier-mediated processes Unsaturated enzyme-mediated processes

10 Second-Order Processes
Follow exponential time course Rate is dependent on concentration of two reactants v = [A]/t = k[A]*[B]

11 Steady-state kinetics
E + S ES E + P [ES] is constant, i.e. ES/t = 0 k-1

12 Saturated metabolism Saturated activation Saturated detoxication

13 Uptake Higher concentration Carrier Pore Diffusion Lipid bilayer
Facilitated diffusion Filtration Active transport Lower concentration

14 Elimination - excretion
Absorption - uptake Elimination - excretion Passive diffusion Filtration Carrier-mediated

15 The single compartment (one compartment) model
kin kout

16 Kinetics of absorption
Absorption is generally a first-order process Absorption constant = ka Concentration inside the compartment = C C/t = ka * D where D = external dose

17 Kinetics of elimination
Elimination is also generally a first-order process Removal rate constant k, the sum of all removal processes C/t = -kC where C = concentration inside compartment C = C0e-kt Log10C = Log10C0 - kt/2.303

18 First-order elimination
Half-life, t1/2 Units: time t1/2 = 0.693/k

19 One compartment system

20 First-order decay of plasma concentration

21 Area under the curve (AUC)

22 Total body burden Integration of internal concentration over time
Area under the curve

23 Volume of Distribution
Apparent volume in which a chemical is distributed in the body Calculated from plasma concentration and dose: Vd = Dose/C0 Physiological fluid space: approximately 1L/kg

24 A more complex time-course

25 The two-compartment model
Tissues Central compartment Peripheral kin kout Plasma

26 The three-compartment model
Deep depot Peripheral compartment kin kout Central Slow equilibrium Rapid equilibrium

27 The four-compartment model
Mamillary model Peripheral compartment kin Central compartment Deep depot Kidney kout

28 The four-compartment model
Catenary model A B C D kout kin

29 Physiologically-Based Pharmacokinetic Modeling
Each relevant organ or tissue is a compartment Material flows into compartment, partitions into and distributes around compartment, flows out of compartment – usually in blood If blood flow rates, volume of compartment and partition coefficient are known, can write an equation for each compartment Assuming conservation of mass, solve equations simultaneously – can calculate concentration (mass) in each compartment at any time

30 Example of equation δkidney/δt = (Cak * Qa) – (Ck * Qvk) IN OUT
Rate of change of the amount in the kidney = Concentration in (incoming) arterial blood X arterial blood flow Minus Concentration in (outgoing) venous blood X venous blood flow

31 Example of a model Air inhaled Lungs Venous blood Arterial blood
Rest of body Liver Metabolism Kidneys Urine

32 Casaret and Doull, 7th Edn, Chapter 7, pp 317-325


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