Basics of Pharmacology

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
0.0(0)
full-widthCall Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/129

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

130 Terms

1
New cards

What does pharmacokinetics describe?

What the body does to the drug

2
New cards

What are the four main pharmacokinetic processes?

1. Absorption

2. Distribution

3. Metabolism

4. Excretion

3
New cards

Are pharmacokinetic processes common to all drugs?

Yes

4
New cards

What does systemic absorption of a drug into circulation depend on?

1. Drug’s solubility

2. Blood flow to the site of absorption

3. Area of absorbing surface available

5
New cards

The relative amount of drug that reaches systemic circulation

Bioavailability

6
New cards

What is the bioavailability of drugs given intravenously (IV) or intramuscularly (IM)?

1 (100%)

7
New cards

Why is bioavailability usually less for oral or rectal (enteral) drugs?

First-pass metabolism by the liver

8
New cards

In anesthesia, why do most drugs have 100% bioavailability?

Because they are given IV and instantly reach systemic circulation

9
New cards

Metabolism that occurs before a drug reaches systemic circulation or its target site

First-pass metabolism

10
New cards

How does first-pass metabolism affect bioavailability?

Significantly reduces the bioavailability of drugs

→ Especially when taken orally

11
New cards

Which organ is the primary site of first-pass metabolism for enteral drugs?

Liver

12
New cards

In which organs can first-pass metabolism occur?

1. Liver

2. Lungs (Ex: Fentanyl uptake/metabolism)

3. Plasma esterases/pseudocholinesterase

13
New cards

Succinylcholine is metabolized by

Pseudocholinesterase

14
New cards

What is pseudocholinesterase also known as?

1. Butyrylcholinesterase

2. Plasma cholinesterase

15
New cards

Which tissue group gets the largest share of cardiac output despite being a small % of body weight?

Vessel-Rich Group (VRG)

16
New cards

Which tissue group gets almost no cardiac output?

Vessel-Poor Group (VPG)

17
New cards

Examples of VPG

1. Bones

2. Ligaments

3. Cartilage

18
New cards

Percentage of CO for:

1. Vessel-rich group

2. Muscle and skin

3. Fat

4. Vessel-poor group

1. Vessel-rich group → 75%

2. Muscle and skin → 19%

3. Fat → 6%

4. Vessel-poor group → 0%

19
New cards

After an injection, where does a drug initially distribute?

Vessel-rich group (VRG) tissues

→ Because most cardiac output goes there

20
New cards

__________ rapidly equilibrate into CNS tissue but are also avidly taken up into fat

Lipophilic drugs

21
New cards

The movement of a drug from vessel-rich tissues (Ex: Brain/CNS) into less perfused tissues (Ex: Fat or muscle), reducing its clinical effect

Redistribution

22
New cards

For lipophilic drugs, _______ will gradually absorb the drug over time due to redistribution

Fat

23
New cards

Why does redistribution cause drug effects to wear off?

Because drug concentration in the target organ falls as it moves into fat and muscle, even though the drug is still present in the body

24
New cards

What happens with repeated doses of lipophilic drugs?

Peripheral tissues accumulate the drug

→ Impact of redistribution is reduced, leading to prolonged drug effects

25
New cards

After redistribution has occurred, what mainly determines the fall in plasma drug concentration?

Elimination by metabolism and excretion

26
New cards

What causes the major initial drop in plasma drug concentration after injection?

Rapid distribution of the drug into vessel-rich group (VRG) tissues

27
New cards

True or false: Most drugs are bound to plasma proteins and unavailable for uptake or excretion

True

28
New cards

Which plasma protein mainly binds acidic or neutral drugs?

Albumin

29
New cards

Which plasma protein mainly binds basic drugs?

α1-acid glycoprotein

30
New cards

What is the effect of low plasma protein levels on drug availability?

Increased availability

→ Higher amount of free drug in serum, since less is bound to proteins

31
New cards

What conditions lower plasma protein levels, leading to more free drug in plasma?

1. Age

2. Hepatic disease

3. Renal failure

4. CHF

5. Major burns

6. Pregnancy

32
New cards

Does plasma protein binding significantly affect propofol?

No, because propofol is given in a lipid emulsion that provides its own binding

33
New cards

In theory, how should higher free drug levels affect drug action?

Increase the drug’s effect

→ However, in practice, this relationship is unclear

34
New cards

Do plasma proteins account for most drug binding in the body?

No

→ Plasma proteins only account for small portion of total binding sites for a drug in the body

35
New cards

How much do changes in plasma protein concentration influence drug action at receptor sites?

Generally very little

36
New cards

Are most drugs weak or strong acids/bases?

Most are weak acids or weak bases

→ Existing in both ionized and non-ionized forms

37
New cards

Which form of a drug is usually lipid-soluble?

Non-ionized form

38
New cards

Which form of a drug is usually water-soluble?

Ionized form

39
New cards

Which form of a drug is usually pharmacologically active?

Non-ionized form

40
New cards

Which form of a drug can easily cross cell membranes, such as BBB, placenta, renal tubular epithelium, and hepatocytes?

Non-ionized form

41
New cards

How does ionization affect drug handling in the body?

1. Reduces GI absorption

2. Limits hepatocyte metabolism

3. Promotes renal excretion

42
New cards

What is the general equilibrium equation for a weak acid and a weak base?

Weak acid: H⁺ + A⁻ ⟷ HA

Week base: H⁺ + B ⟷ HB⁺

43
New cards

According to Le Chatelier's principle, what happens when [H⁺] increases (acidic environment)?

The equilibrium shifts to the right

→ Adding more reactants = Right shift

H⁺ + A⁻ ⟷ HA

H⁺ + B ⟷ HB⁺

44
New cards

What does the pKa of a drug represent?

pH at which the drug is 50% ionized and 50% nonionized

→ Henderson-Hasselbalch equation

pH = pKa + log([A-]/[HA])

→ At 50% ionized and 50% non-ionized, [A-]/[HA] is 1

→ Log1 = 0, so pH = pKa

45
New cards

If serum pH is lower than the drug's pKa, which way does equilibrium shift?

To the right (more protonated forms)

→ More H+/reactant in serum

H⁺ + A⁻ ⟷ HA

H⁺ + B ⟷ HB⁺

46
New cards

If serum pH is higher than the drug's pKa, which way does the equilibrium shift?

To the left (more deprotonated forms)

→ Environment is more basic than the drug. Left shift to maintain equilibrium

H⁺ + A⁻ ⟷ HA

H⁺ + B ⟷ HB⁺

47
New cards

Midazolam is a Base (H⁺ + B ⟷ HB⁺)

• pKa = 6.2

• Blood pH = 7.4

Which side will the equation shift?

Is midazolam ionized or non-ionized in the blood?

1. Left shift

2. Midazolam is mostly non-ionized in blood

48
New cards

Propofol is an Acid (H⁺ + A⁻ ⟷ HA)

• pKa = 11

• Blood pH = 7.4

Which side will the equation shift?

Is propofol ionized or non-ionized in the blood?

1. Right shift

2. Propofol is mostly non-ionized in blood

49
New cards

When are weak bases mostly nonionized?

When the pH is greater than their pKa

50
New cards

When are weak acids mostly nonionized?

When the pH is lower than their pKa

51
New cards

What is the main purpose of drug metabolism?

Convert pharmacologically active, lipid-soluble drugs into water-soluble, usually inactive metabolites

52
New cards

Can metabolites be more potent than the parent drug? Examples?

Yes

→ Morphine’s metabolite M6G is more potent

53
New cards

What is a prodrug? Example?

An inactive compound that becomes active after metabolism

→ Codeine to morphine

54
New cards

What are the four basic pathways of drug metabolism?

Phase I

1. Oxidation

2. Reduction

3. Hydrolysis

Phase II

4. Conjugation

55
New cards

Which phase of metabolism introduces or unmasks a polar group on the drug?

Phase I reactions

56
New cards

Which phase of metabolism adds an endogenous substrate to make the drug more water-soluble?

Phase II reactions

57
New cards

Where do oxidation and reduction occur in Phase I of metabolism?

Liver

58
New cards

What is the role of oxidation and reduction in Phase I metabolism?

Increase the polarity of drug molecules before Phase II

59
New cards

Where does hydrolysis often occur?

Outside the liver, commonly in plasma and tissues

60
New cards

Give examples of drugs metabolized by ester hydrolysis in plasma/tissues

1. Remifentanil

2. Succinylcholine

3. Esmolol

4. Ester local anesthetics

61
New cards

Why do most drugs need to become polar (hydrophilic)?

To allow excretion

62
New cards

A large family of membrane-bound enzymes responsible for metabolizing many drugs

Cytochrome P450 enzyme system

63
New cards

Which CYP enzyme metabolizes more than half of all drugs?

CYP3A4

64
New cards

What happens when drugs induce CYP enzymes?

Metabolism increases → Drug effects and duration decrease

65
New cards

What happens with ongoing drug exposure that induces CYP enzymes?

Enzyme activity rises → Metabolism of other drugs handled by the same enzyme subtype is altered

66
New cards

What happens when drugs inhibit CYP enzymes?

Metabolism decreases → Drug effects and duration increase

67
New cards

What is the purpose of forming conjugates in Phase II metabolism?

To create highly polar compounds that are easily excreted in urine or bile

68
New cards

Is drug metabolism always strictly Phase I followed by Phase II?

Usually sequential, but not always

→ Some Phase I metabolites are excreted directly

→ Some Phase II reactions can occur before Phase I

→ Some drugs undergo Phase II without Phase I at all

69
New cards

How does drug metabolism differ in neonates (<1 year old)?

They have reduced Phase I and Phase II enzyme activity

→ Slower drug clearance

70
New cards

What is hepatic clearance? Equation?

Volume of blood cleared of a drug per unit time

→ Hepatic blood flow × Extraction ratio

71
New cards

1. How are drugs with a low hepatic extraction ratio cleared?

2. What factor increases clearance for low extraction ratio drugs?

3. How does hepatic blood flow affect clearance?

1. They are capacity-limited

→ Clearance depends on liver enzyme activity

2. Enzyme induction = Proportional increase in clearance

3. Minimal effect on clearance

→ Liver can only handle a fraction of the drug at a time, regardless of the amount of blood flow

72
New cards

1. How are drugs with a high hepatic extraction ratio cleared?

2. What factor increases clearance for low extraction ratio drugs?

1. They are flow-limited

→ Clearance depends on hepatic blood flow

2. Increased/decreased blood flow = Proportional change in clearance

73
New cards

True or false: For high hepatic extraction ratio drugs, the liver removes almost all of the drug delivered by the blood

True

74
New cards

What is renal clearance? Equation

The rate of drug elimination by the kidneys

→ Renal blood flow × Renal extraction ratio

75
New cards

Which form of a drug is excreted in urine?

Ionized form

76
New cards

Which form of a drug is more likely to be reabsorbed in the renal tubules?

Non-ionized, lipophilic form

→ They cross membranes readily and diffuse back into the blood

77
New cards

How should drug dosing be adjusted in patients with severe renal disease?

Doses should be reduced to prevent buildup of drugs and their metabolites

78
New cards

What is the Cockcroft-Gault equation used for?

Estimating creatinine clearance

79
New cards

How is creatinine clearance related to GFR?

It closely reflects GFR but is not identical

→ Slightly overestimates true GFR (about 10–20%)

80
New cards

Why is creatinine useful for estimating clearance?

1. Water-soluble

2. Not reabsorbed in the renal tubules

81
New cards

What causes the rapid decline in plasma drug concentration (α phase)?

1. Distribution from central compartments → peripheral compartments

2. Hepatic clearance of high-extraction drugs

3. Plasma metabolism by enzymatic hydrolysis

82
New cards

What causes the slower decline in plasma drug concentration (β phase)?

1. Redistribution of drug from peripheral → central compartments

2. Drug removal by metabolism and elimination

83
New cards

What is the α phase also called?

Distribution phase

84
New cards

What is the β phase also called?

Elimination phase

85
New cards

A constant percentage of the drug is removed per unit time

First-order kinetics drug elimination

86
New cards

A constant amount of drug is removed per unit time

Zero-order kinetics drug elimination

87
New cards

Which type of drug elimination depends on serum concentration, and which type does not?

Depends on serum concentration → First-order kinetics

Independent of serum concentration → Zero-order kinetics

88
New cards

When can zero-order kinetics occur for drugs that usually follow first-order?

At high serum concentrations

→ Metabolic pathways are saturated and cannot increase clearance

89
New cards

Time required for serum concentration to decrease by half

Half-life

90
New cards

After 5 half-lives, ____% of drug is gone

97%

91
New cards

True or false: Drugs with shorter half-life require less frequent dosing

False

→ Drugs with shorter half-life require more frequent dosing

92
New cards

The extent that drug is distributed

Volume of distribution (Vd)

93
New cards

Describes capacity of tissues to absorb a drug

Volume of distribution (Vd)

94
New cards

Which type of drug has a higher volume of distribution, lipophilic or hydrophilic drugs?

Lipophilic drugs

95
New cards

What does context-sensitive half-time mean?

The time for plasma concentration to fall by half after stopping an infusion, where “context” refers to the infusion duration

96
New cards

Why does context-sensitive half-time increase with longer infusions?

Because more drug accumulates in peripheral tissues, which then redistribute back into plasma after the infusion stops

→ INCREASES as a function of the duration of the infusion

97
New cards

What the drug does to the body

Pharmacodynamics

98
New cards

Maximum possible drug effect (Emax)

Efficacy

→ More efficacy = Higher max effect

99
New cards

The dose required to produce a therapeutic effect in 50% of the population

ED₅₀

100
New cards

Dose required to cause death or toxicity in 50% of the population

LD₅₀ or TD₅₀

Explore top flashcards