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Posted : Thu Jul 14, 2005 Post subject: Pharmacokinetics |
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Some Factors Influencing Absorption and Bioavailability
Absorption
Absorption Principles:
Permeation:
Passive diffusion (aqueous or lipid environment): most common
Active transport: important for some drugs, particularly larger molecules.
I. Aqueous diffusion
within large aqueous components (e.g.,interstitial space, cytosol)
across epithelial membrane tight junctions
across endothelial blood vessel lining
through aqueous pores: allows diffusion of molecules with molecular weights up to 20,000 -- 30,000.
Driving force: drug concentration gradient (described by Fick's Law ).
The driving force represents a tendency for molecules to move in the direction of higher concentration to lower concentration in accord with random molecular motion. A traditional way of thinking about this is to imagine a fluid-filled container which is two sections divided by an imaginary plane. The solution on one side is more concentrated in terms of some dissolved substance that is the solution on the other side of the boundary plane.
Recall that the molecules move randomly, suggesting that sometimes a molecule initially in the "low concentration" section can move to the "high concentration" section. However, on balance. It is more likely that based on probability molecules will tend to move from the higher concentrations side to the lower concentrations side. Suppose that initially there are 2,000 molecules on side A and 1,000 molecules on side B. After a while we look again and find that there now are 1750 molecules on side A and 1250 molecules on side B-- a new ratio is been established, but the process continues until the ratio is approximately 1:1.
Plasma protein-bound drugs cannot permeate through aqueous pores
Charged drugs will be influenced by electric field potentials {membrane potentials, important in renal, trans-tubular transport}
Fick's Law describes passive movement molecules down its concentration gradient.
Flux (J) (molecules per unit time) = (C1 - C2) · (Area ·Permeability coefficient) / Thickness
where C1 is the higher concentration and C2 is the lower concentration
area = area across which diffusion occurs
permeability coefficient: drug mobility in the diffusion path
for lipid diffusion, lipid: aqueous partition coefficient -- major determinant of drug mobility
partition coefficient reflects how easily the drug enters the lipid phase from the aqueous medium.
thickness: length of the diffusion path
II. Lipid diffusion
Most important barrier for drug permeation due to:
many lipid barriers separating body compartments
Lipid: aqueous drug partition coefficients described the ease with which a drug moves between aqueous and lipid environments
Ionization state of the drug is an important factor: charged drugs diffuse-through lipid environments with difficulty.
pH and the drug pKa, important in determining the ionization state, will influence significantly transport (ratios of lipid-to aqueous-soluble forms for weak acids and bases described by the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation.
uncharged form: lipid-soluble
charged form: aqueous-soluble, relatively lipid-insoluble (does not pass biological membranes easily)
Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
General Form: log (protonated)/(unprotonated) = pKa - pH
For Acids: pKa = pH + log (concentration [HA] unionized)/concentration [A-]
note that if [A-] = [HA] then pKa = pH + log (1) or (since log(1) = 0), pKa = pH
For Bases: pKa = pH + log (concentration [BH+] ionized)/concentration
note that if [B] = [BH+] then pKa = pH + log (1) or (since log(1) = 0), pKa = pH
The lower the pH relative to the pKa the greater fraction of protonated drug is found. Recall that the protonated form of an acid is uncharged (neutral); however, protonated form of a base will be charged.
As a result, a weak acid at acid pH will be more lipid-soluble because it is uncharged and uncharged molecules move more readily through a lipid (nonpolar) environment, like the some membrane, than charged molecules
Similarly a weak base at alkaline pH will be more lipid-soluble because at alkaline pH a proton will dissociate from molecule leaving it uncharged and again free to move through lipid membrane structures
Lipid diffusion depends on adequate lipid solubility
Drug ionization reduces a drug's ability to cross a lipid bilayer.
Drugs that are weak acids or bases
A weak acid is a neutral molecule that dissociates into an anion (negatively charged) and a proton (a hydrogen ion) Example:
C8H7O2COOH < > C8H7O2COO- + H+
neutral aspirin (C8H7O2COOH) in equilibrium with aspirin anion (C8H7O2COO- ) and a proton (H+ )
weak acid: protonated form -- neutral, more lipid-soluble
weak base:a neutral molecule that can form a cation (positively charged) by combining with a proton. Example:
C12H11CIN3NH3+ < > C12H11CIN3NH2 + H+
pyrimethamine cation (C12H11CIN3NH3+) in equilibrium with neutral pyrimethamine (C12H11CIN3NH2) and a proton (H+ )
weak base: protonated form -- charged, less lipid-soluble
III. [b]Special Carriers
Peptides, amino acids, glucose are examples of molecules then enter cells through special carrier mechanisms.
Carriers:
Active transport describes an energy requiring process which is saturable, meaning that transport is probably against the concentration gradient and involves a finite number of carriers, hence the process must be saturable when all carrier sites are filled.
Facilitated diffusion, while not requiring "energy" is also saturable (limited number of carrier sites)
Saturable (unlike passive diffusion) because of limited number of carrier sites--once those sites are filled, transport rates cannot be increased.
A property of carrier systems is that process is subject to inhibition by other small molecules.
IV. Endocytosis and exocytosis:
Entry into cells by very large substances (e.g., iron vitamin B12 -- each complexed with its binding protein -- movement across intestinal wall into the blood)
Neurotransmitter system examples for exocytosis:
Following neuronal electrical activation of nerve endings, two steps may be initiated:
Storage vesicles containing neurotransmitter fuse with cell membranes followed by
release or diffusion of contents into the extracellular region.
Extent of Absorption
Incomplete absorption following oral drug administration is common:
For example -- only 70% of a digoxin dose reaches systemic circulation. Factors:
poor GI tract absorption
digoxin (Lanoxin, Lanoxicaps) --- metabolism by gastrointestinal flora
Very hydrophilic drugs - not be well absorbed --cannot cross cell membrane lipid component
Excessively lipid-soluble (hydrophobic) drugs may not be soluble enough to cross a water layer near the cell membrane.
Ion trapping
Kidney:
Nearly all drugs filtered at the glomerulus:
Most drugs in a lipid-soluble form will be reabsorbed by passive diffusion.
To increase excretion: change the urinary pH to favor the charged form of the drug since charged form cannot be readily reabsorbed (they cannot readily pass through biological membranes)
Weak acids: excreted faster in alkaline pH (anion form favored)
Weak bases: excreted faster in acidic pH (cation form favored)
Other sites:
Body fluids where pH differences from blood pH favor trapping or reabsorption:
stomach contents
small intestine
breast milk
aqueous humor (eye)
vaginal secretions
prostatic secretions
IMPORTANT: Ion Trapping: Anesthesia Correlation:Placental transfer of basic drugs
Placental transfer of basic drugs from mother to fetus: local anesthetics
fetal pH is lower than maternal pH
lipid-soluble, nonionized local anesthetic crosses the placenta converted to poorly lipid-soluble ionized drug
gradient is maintained for continual transfer of local anesthetic from maternal circulation to fetal circulation
in fetal distress, acidosis contributes to local anesthetic accumulation
Routes of Administration
Oral Administration
Most convenient, most economical
Disadvantages:
emesis (drug irritation of the gastrointestinal mucosa)
digestive enzymes/gastric acidity destroys the drug
unreliable or inconsistent absorption due to food or other drug effects
metabolism of the drug by gastrointestinal flora
Factors determining rate of drug effect onset
Primary factor:
Rate & absorption extent by GI tract
Absorption Site:
mainly small intestine because of large surface area
Drug ionization state:
nonionized (lipid-soluble) forms favor absorption
weak acids may be highly ionized in the alkaline intestinal pH (not favoring absorption) but this effect is counterbalanced by the large surface-area effect
drugs which are weak acids are readily absorbed in the stomach
First-Pass Effect
Drugs absorbed from the GI tract passes through the portal venous system then through the liver and finally into the systemic circulation when drugs interact with receptors in target tissues.
Extensive hepatic metabolism/extraction result in minimal drug delivery to the systemic circulation for certain agents.
Drugs with large first pass effect exhibit significant differences in pharmacological effects comparing oral vs. IV administration
Examples:
propranolol
lidocaine
return to Table of Contents
Transdermal Administration
Advantages:
sustained, therapeutic plasma levels (reduced peaks/valleys associated with intermittent drug administrations)
Avoids continuous infusion technique difficulties
Low side effect incidence (smaller doses)
Generally good patient compliance
Factors contributing to reliable transdermal drug absorption:
molecular weight < 1000
pH range 5-9 in aqueous medium
no histamine-releasing action
daily drug requirement <10 mg
Example of drugs available for transdermal delivery:
scopolamine:-tolerance may eventually occur; resulting in loss of therapeutic action
fentanyl (Sublimaze)
clonidine (Catapres)
nitroglycerin-tolerance may eventually occur; resulting in loss of therapeutic action
Rectal Administration
Proximal rectum administration: Absorption into superior hemorrhoidal veins then enters the portal venous system then to the liver (possible first pass hepatic effect) and finally into the systemic circulation
Low rectal administration of drug may allow the drug to enter the systemic circulation without passing through the liver
Generally unpredictable pharmacological responses for the above reasons
Rectal mucosal irritation possible
Parenteral Administration
Ensures active drug absorption
subcutaneously intramuscular injection: more rapid/predictable than oral administration route
only route of administration acceptable for:
uncooperative patients
unconscious patients
Factors the determine rate of systemic absorption:
absorbing capillary membrane surface area
drug solubility in interstitial fluid
aqueous channels (vascular endothelium) promote high diffusion rates of drugs, independent of their lipid solubility
Advantages of IV administration
rapid/precise blood drug levels obtained (e.g., no first-pass effect)
Irritant drugs: more comfortably administered (blood vessels relatively insensitive); drug rapidly diluted (particularly if administered into large forearm vein)
First Pass Effect
First-pass Elimination:
Transport sequence:
across the gut wall into the portal circulation
portal blood transports of the drug to the liver
the drug may then reach the systemic circulation
bioavailability may be affected by steps 1 -- 3
drug metabolism may occur in the intestinal wall or in the blood
drug metabolism (potentially extensive) may occur in liver
liver may excrete drug into the bile
overall process that contributes to bioavailability reduction is the first-pass lost or elimination
Magnitude of first pass hepatic effect: Extraction ratio (ER)
ER = CL liver / Q ; where Q is hepatic blood flow (usually about 90 L per hour {1500 ml/min})
Systemic drug bioavailability (F) may be determined from the extent of absorption (f) and the extraction ratio (ER):
F = f x (1 -ER)
Extraction Ratios, Routes of Administration, and the First-Pass Effect
Some drugs that exhibit high extraction by the liver are given orally.
Some examples -- desipramine (Norpramin), imipramine (Tofranil), meperidine (Demerol), propranolol (Inderal), amitriptyline (Elavil, Endep), isoniazid (INH).
Some drugs which have relatively low bioavailability are not given orally because of concern of metabolite toxicity -- lidocaine is an example (CNS toxicity, convulsions)
High extraction ratio drugs show interpatient bioavailability variation because all of sensitivity to:
-hepatic function
-blood flow
-hepatic disease (intrahepatic or extrahepatic circulatory shunting)
Drugs poorly extracted by the liver
-phenytoin (Dilantin)
-diazepam (Valium)
-digitoxin (Crystodigin)
-chlorpropamide (Diabinese)
-theophylline
-Tolbutamide (Orinase)
-warfarin (Coumadin)
Avoiding the first-pass effect:
-sublingual (e.g. nitroglycerin)-- direct access to systemic circulation
-transdermal
-use of suppositories in the lower rectum {if suppositories move upward, absorption may occur through the superior hemorrhoidal veins, which lead to the liver}
-inhalation: first-pass pulmonary loss by excretion or metabolism may occur
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