Pharmacology (Dr. Nico)
Pharmacology (Dr. Nico)
Pharmacology (Dr. Nico)
Pharmacokinetics
Dr. dr. Nicolaski Lumbuun, SpFK
• What is drug?
– All substance which can produce biologically effect in the
body, in a small or limited amount
– Just a modifier/optimizer effect in human body
– Can’t give a new thing/feature
• In other words
Pharmacokinetics (PK) deals with the dose-concentration part
Pharmacodynamics (PD) governs the concentration-effect part
of the interaction
PK / PD
Terminology of Pharmacokinetic
The science of the rate of movement of drugs within
biological systems, as affected by the absorption,
distribution, metabolism, and elimination
of medications
ADME - overview
LOCUS OF ACTION TISSUE
“RECEPTORS” RESERVOIRS
Bound Free Free Bound
SYSTEMIC
Bound Drug CIRCULATION
BIOTRANSFORMATION
Pharmacokinetics
– Dose
Transport
Pore
active
pKa=pH+log(HA/A-) pKa=pH+log(BH+/B)
ASPIRIN pKa = 4.5 (weak acid) STRYCHNINE pKa = 9.5 (weak base)
100mg orally 100mg orally
99.9 = [ UI ] [ UI ] 0.1 = [ UI ] [ UI ]
to
systemic
circulation
Dose
Dose
Dose
Dose
Dose
Bioavailability = (AUC)oral / (AUC)intravein
70
P
L
60
A
S 50
M
A 40 intravein route
C 30
O oral route
N
C
20
E
N 10
T
R. 0
0 2 4 6 8 10
Time (hours)
Time to Peak Concentration
100
90
80
concentration
70
60 IV
50 Oral
40 Rectal
30
20
10
0
0 5 10 20 30 60 120 180
minutes
Bioavailability
• Extent of Absorption After oral administration, a drug
may be incompletely absorbed, mainly due to lack of
absorption from the gut (too hydrophilic or too lipophilic)
• First-Pass Elimination Following absorption across the gut
wall, the portal blood delivers the drug to the liver prior to
entry into the systemic circulation.
• Rate of Absorption gastric emptying rate (peristalsis)
• Alternative Routes of Administration & the First-Pass Effect
topical, transdermal, sublingual, rectal suppositories
Sustained release preparations
• Depot injections (oily, viscous, particle size)
• Multilayer tablets (pellet)
• Sustained release capsules (resins)
• Infusors (with or without sensors)
• Skin patches (nicotine, Nitroglycerine)
• Pro-drugs
• Liposomes Targeted drugs , antibody-directed
DISTRIBUTION - overview
The body is a container in which a drug is distributed by blood
(different flow to different organs) - but the body is not
homogeneous.
Volume of distribution = Vd = D/Co
• Membrane permeability
– cross membranes to site of action
• Plasma protein binding
– bound drugs do not cross membranes
– malnutrition = albumin = free drug
• Lipophilicity of drug
– lipophilic drugs accumulate in adipose tissue
• Volume of distribution
LOCUS OF ACTION TISSUE
“RECEPTORS” RESERVOIRS
Bound Free Free Bound
SYSTEMIC
Bound Drug CIRCULATION
BIOTRANSFORMATION
Distribution into body compartments
• Plasma 3.5 litres, heparin, plasma expanders
• Extracellular fluid 14 litres, (tubocurarine)
• Total body water 30-40 litres, (ethanol, theophillin)
• Chloroquine 15000L Shows highly lipophilic molecules which
sequester into total body fat.
• Transcellular small, CSF, eye, foetus (must pass tight junctions)
1000 molecules
Effective TOXIC
Alter plasma binding of drugs (50% dissociation)
1000 molecules
10 % bound 5
Hepatocytes
portal smooth bile
venous endoplasmic
blood reticulum
microsomes
contain cytochrome
systemic P450
arterial dependent
blood mixed function oxidases
venous blood
Types of biotransformation reaction
• Any structural change in a drug molecule may change its activity
• Phase I - changes drugs and creates site for phase II
oxidation (adds O) eg. Microsomes (P450); reduction; hydrolysis
(eg. by plasma esterases), others
• Phase II - couples group to existing (or phase I formed)
conjugation site glucuronide (with glucuronic acid), sulphate,
others
OH O-SO3
Phase
Phase
I
II
Genetic polymorphism in cytochrome P450
dependent mixed function oxidases
CYP 450 Cytochrome P450
FOUR families 1-4
SIX sub-families A-F
up to TWENTY isoenzymes 1-20
CYP3A4 : CYP2D6 : CYP2C9 : CYP2C19 :CYP2A6
Known Polymorphysm:
CYP2D6*17: Caucasian 0%, African 6%, Asian 51%
- reduced affinity for substrates
Plasma conc in 267 pts after 9.8 mg/kg isoniazid orally
25
20
No. of patients
15
10
0
0 1 2 3 Isoniazid conc. ug/ml 9 10 11 12
Other (non-microsomal) reactions
• Hydrolysis in plasma by esterases (suxamethonium by
cholinesterase)
• Alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase in cytosolic
fraction of liver (ethanol)
• Monoamine oxidase in mitochondria (tyramine,
noradrenaline, dopamine, amines)
• Xanthene oxidase (6-mercaptopurine, uric acid
production)
• enzymes for particular drugs (tyrosine hydroxylase,
dopa-decarboxylase etc)
Factors affecting biotransformation
• race (CYP2C9; warfarin (bleeding) phenytoin (ataxia) Losartan (less
cleared but less activated as well); also fast and slow isoniazid
acetylators, fast = 95% Inuit, 50% Brits, 13% Finns, 13% Egyptians).
• age (reduced in aged patients & children)
• sex (women slower ethanol metabilizers)
• species (phenylbutazone 3h rabbit, 6h horse, 8h monkey, 18h
mouse, 36h man)
• clinical or physiological condition
• other drug administration (induction (not CYP2D6 ) or inhibition)
• food (charcoal grill ++CYP1A)(grapefruit juice --CYP3A)
• first-pass (pre-systemic) metabolism
Inhibitors & inducers of microsomal enz
• INHIBITORS : cimetidine ; prolongs action of drugs or
inhibits action of those biotransformed to active
agents (pro-drugs)
• INDUCERS barbiturates, carbamazepine shorten
action of drugs or increase effects of those
biotransformed to active agents
• BLOCKERS acting on non-microsomal enzymes (MAOI,
anticholinesterase drugs)
EXCRETION - overview
• Urine is the main but NOT the only route.
• Glomerular filtration allows drugs <25K MW to pass into urine;
reduced by plasma protein binding; only a portion of plasma is
filtered.
• Tubular secretion active carrier process for cations and for
anions; inhibited by probenicid.
• Passive re-absorption of lipid soluble drugs back into the body
across the tubule cells.
Note effect of pH to make more of weak acid drug present in
ionised form in alkaline pH therefore re-absorbed less and
excreted faster; vica-versa for weak bases.
Effect of lipid solubility and pH
Re-absorption