What is therapeutic equivalence?
Therapeutic equivalence: A drug can be substituted with a new additional brand of an existing drug (generic drug) & still equal effects
-> Aspirin exists in different formations but same amount of active ingredient, efficacy, side effects
What is the function of NET transporters (physiological & pharmacological)?
Physio.: Norepinephrine reuptake from synapse
Pharm.: Target of cocaine and some tricyclic antidepressants
What is the function of SERT transporters (physiological & pharmacological)?
Physio.: Serotonin reuptake from synapse
Pharm.: Target of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and some tricyclic antidepressants
What is the function of VMAT transporters (physiological & pharmacological)?
Physio.: Transport of dopamine and norepinephrine into adrenergic vesicles in nerve endings
Pharm.: Target of reserpine and tetrabenazine
What is the function of MDR1 transporters (physiological & pharmacological)?
Physio.: Transport of many xenobiotics out of cells
Pharm.: Increased expression confers resistance to certain anticancer drugs; inhibition increases blood levels of digoxin
What is the function of MRP1 transporters (physiological & pharmacological)?
Physio.: Leukotriene secretion
Pharm.: Confers resistance to certain anticancer and antifungal drugs
What is PK & PD?
PK -> Pharmacokinetics
“What does the body do to the drug”
PD -> Pharmacodynamics
“What does the drug do to the body”
What does Pharmacokinetics consist of?
ADME
absorption
distribution
metabolism
excretion
What is the strongest bond a drug can have to receptor & effect?
Covalent bond -> irreversible bond
How does the ionic trap occur?
weak base in blood & acidic urine -> drug through nephron cells into urine -> ionization of drug -> trapped in urine & excreted
same happens with milk of mother -> dangerous for child
What happens in Aspirin overdose?
Aspirin (weak acid) overdose -> mixed respiratory alkalosis and metabolic acidosis
prolonged effect due to serum & urinary acidosis (no ionic trap but reabsorption of exreted drug & entry into tissue)
Sodium bicarbonate (weak base) "-> alkalosis -> drug clearance
What are the stages of drug development and approval process
How does absorption of a drug occur?
Passive (simple) diffusion
water soluble drugs
mol. weight below 1000
Active transport
transport maximum -> rate of active transport depends on drug concentration in enviroment
also important for resistence
Facilitated diffusion
diffusion but with carrier proteins
saturable
Pinocytosis
Simple diffusion via aqueous pores in which drugs?
caffeine
ascorbic acid
acetylsalicylic acid
nicotinamide
What drug related factors affecr drug absorption?
mol./particle size
small size -> increased absorption rate
Lipid solubility
high sol. -> incr. abs.
Degree of ionization
ionized -> decreased abs.
Dosage form
liquid solution form of drug mol -> faster abs.
Chem. nature
salt forms of weak acid & base incr. abs
Complex form.
solubility increased -> incr. abs.
incr size -> decr abs
Pharmacological effect
transition time in GI tract
effect on blood flow
Drug conc
high conc -> high abs
Why is lidocaine bound to epinephrine?
Epinephrine -> vasoconstriction
-> decr. blood flow -> decr. absorption -> longer duration
-> decr. blood flow -> reduced bleeding
-> higher conc at injection site (local)
What routes of drug administration?
Local administration
Epidermal, Intracutaneous, Conjunctival, Buccal…
Systemic administration
Enteral route
Parenteral route
Inhalation
Transdermal route
What is the enteral route & types?
Enteral -> via GI tract
Oral
Disintegration, dissolution & absorption of what’s left
absorbed from duodenum, jejunum and upper ileum
bioavailability affected by various factors
Sublingual
high lipophilic drugs (Cardiac nitrates, Ca+ channel blockers like nifedipine and steroids)
quick effect & high bioavailability
Rectal
enema (liquid), suppositories (solid)
immediate effect
esp. gastric mucosa irritating drugs, bad taste
What is the bioavailability of a drug?
liver metabolizes drug to inactive form
Bioavailability: In which extent the body benefits from the drug/how much unchanged drug reaches circulation after escaping liver (~10%)
What affects bioavailability of drug in oral route?
differences in first-pass metabolism
diff. in general metabolism (pharmacogenomics)
diseases affecting GI motility (diarrhea affects absorption)
body weight (lipophilic drug distribution, needs to be calculated on lipid content normally)
drug-drug/drug-food interactions
stomach emptying time
full/empty stomach
How does full/empty stomach affect drug?
Empty -> faster absorption maybe gastric side effect
Full -> slower absorption & maybe interaction with food (Paracetamol never with protein)
What is the Parenteral route & bioavailability?
into veins (100% bioavailability), muscle (80% b., max. 5ml inj.), subcutaneous (60% b., max. 2ml inj.)
What drugs in transdermal route?
Highly lipophylic f.e. nicotine, morphine, steroids
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