Pharmacokinetics: “What the Body Does to the Drug”
Absorption
- First-pass metabolism significantly reduces bioavailability of orally administered drugs that are highly extracted by the liver (propranolol, morphine, nitroglycerin)
- Weak acids (aspirin) are better absorbed in the acidic stomach; weak bases in the alkaline intestine
- Bioavailability = (AUC oral / AUC IV) × 100
Distribution
- Volume of distribution (Vd) = dose / plasma concentration. High Vd means extensive tissue distribution
- Only unbound (free) drug is pharmacologically active and can be filtered/metabolized
- Drugs don’t cross blood-brain barrier if they’re ionized, highly polar, or large
Metabolism
- Phase I reactions (CYP450): oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis – often create active or toxic metabolites
- Phase II reactions: conjugation (glucuronidation, sulfation) – generally produce inactive, water-soluble products
- CYP3A4 metabolizes ~50% of all drugs – major site of drug interactions
- Zero-order kinetics (alcohol, phenytoin, aspirin at high doses): constant amount metabolized per unit time regardless of concentration
Elimination
- Most drugs follow first-order kinetics: constant fraction eliminated per unit time
- Half-life = 0.693 × (Vd / Clearance)
- Steady state reached in ~4-5 half-lives
- Loading dose = Vd × target concentration; Maintenance dose = Clearance × target concentration
Pharmacodynamics: “What the Drug Does to the Body”
Receptor Concepts
- Efficacy (Emax): maximum effect a drug can produce. Partial agonists have lower efficacy than full agonists
- Potency (EC50): concentration needed for 50% of maximal effect. Less clinically important than efficacy
- Competitive antagonists shift dose-response curve right (can be overcome with more agonist)
- Non-competitive antagonists decrease maximum response (cannot be overcome)
Therapeutic Index
- TI = TD50 / ED50 (or LD50 / ED50). Narrow therapeutic index drugs require monitoring: warfarin, digoxin, lithium, phenytoin, theophylline, aminoglycosides
Autonomic Pharmacology
Cholinergic Drugs
- Muscarinic effects: DUMBBELSS (Diarrhea, Urination, Miosis, Bronchospasm, Bradycardia, Emesis, Lacrimation, Salivation, Sweating)
- Atropine reverses muscarinic effects; pralidoxime reverses nicotinic effects of organophosphates (must give early before “aging”)
- Nicotinic receptors: Nn at ganglia, Nm at neuromuscular junction
Adrenergic Drugs
- α1: vasoconstriction, mydriasis, urinary retention
- α2: decreased sympathetic outflow (central), decreased insulin release
- β1: increased heart rate and contractility (cardiac)
- β2: bronchodilation, vasodilation, tremor, hyperglycemia
- β3: lipolysis
Cardiovascular Drugs
Antihypertensives
- ACE inhibitors cause dry cough (bradykinin accumulation) and hyperkalemia; contraindicated in pregnancy
- ARBs are like ACE inhibitors but without the cough
- Thiazides cause hypokalemia, hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, hyperuricemia, hypercalcemia
- β-blockers mask hypoglycemia symptoms (except sweating) in diabetics
Anticoagulants
- Heparin: monitor with aPTT, reversed by protamine sulfate, can cause HIT (heparin-induced thrombocytopenia)
- Warfarin: monitor with PT/INR, reversed by vitamin K (slow) or fresh frozen plasma (fast), crosses placenta
- Warfarin inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase, affecting factors II, VII, IX, X and proteins C & S
CNS Drugs
General Principles
- Benzodiazepines potentiate GABA-A receptors (increase frequency of opening); barbiturates increase duration of opening
- Flumazenil reverses benzodiazepines; naloxone reverses opioids
- SSRIs take 2-4 weeks for antidepressant effect but side effects occur immediately
- Antipsychotics block D2 receptors; extrapyramidal side effects related to nigrostriatal pathway blockage
Antimicrobials
Key Principles
- Bactericidal: β-lactams, vancomycin, aminoglycosides, fluoroquinolones
- Time-dependent killing: β-lactams (keep concentration above MIC for >40% of dosing interval)
- Concentration-dependent killing: aminoglycosides, fluoroquinolones (maximize peak concentration)
- β-lactams require actively dividing bacteria to work
Resistance Mechanisms
- β-lactamase production (add β-lactamase inhibitor: clavulanate, sulbactam, tazobactam)
- Altered penicillin-binding proteins (MRSA – use vancomycin)
- Decreased permeability or efflux pumps
Drug Interactions
CYP450 Inducers (decrease other drug levels): CRAP GPS – Carbamazepine, Rifampin, Alcohol (chronic), Phenytoin, Griseofulvin, Phenobarbital, St. John’s Wort
CYP450 Inhibitors (increase other drug levels): SICKFACES.COM – Sodium valproate, Isoniazid, Cimetidine, Ketoconazole, Fluconazole, Acute alcohol, Chloramphenicol, Erythromycin, Sulfonamides, Ciprofloxacin, Omeprazole, Metronidazole
Toxicology Antidotes
- Acetaminophen → N-acetylcysteine
- β-blockers → Glucagon
- Benzodiazepines → Flumazenil
- Carbon monoxide → 100% O2, hyperbaric O2
- Digoxin → Anti-digoxin Fab fragments
- Iron → Deferoxamine
- Lead → EDTA, dimercaprol, succimer
- Methanol/ethylene glycol → Fomepizole, ethanol
- Opioids → Naloxone
- Organophosphates → Atropine + pralidoxime
- Warfarin → Vitamin K, fresh frozen plasma
These concepts form the foundation for understanding most pharmacological principles and are frequently tested in medical examinations.
Discover more from PHARMA SOLUTION NEPAL
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Add Comment