Title: Chapter 1 Introduction
1Chapter 1 Introduction
2What is Pharmacology
From the Greek pharmakon (drug), logos (study)
Pharmacology is the science that deals with the
mechanisms of action, uses, adverse effects and
fate of drugs in animals and humans
3Definition of drug
- Substance that when taken into living organism
brings about a change in biologic function
through its chemical actions. - Activation
- Inhibition
4Properties of an ideal drug
- Safety
- Fewer side effects or lower toxicity
- Effectiveness
- Better therapeutic effects
- Selectivity
- Target to desired sites or molecules
5Names of drug
- Each drug has at least three names
- Chemical
- Description of the drug using chemical
nomenclature - Generic
- Non-proprietary name
- Simpler than chemical name
- Trade
- Proprietary or brand names
- Created by companies to sell drugs
6Principles of Drug Action
- Drugs do not produce new function
- No drug has a single action
- have both therapeutic and adverse actions
- Or have multiple therapeutic effects
- Drug vs poison
- dose related
7Principles of Drug Action
- Therapeutic actions are interchangeable
- Actions can be considered therapeutic in one
case and adverse in another - e.g. viagra
8Principles of Drug Action
Drugs effects are variable?
- It depends
- Many sources of variability
- Disease state, age and sex
- route of drug administration, dose, drug
interactions - Deciding to use a drug
- weigh benefits vs. risks
- there are always risks
9Pharmacology deals with two aspects
what the drug does to the body drug action/effect
what the body does to the drug metabolism
10Introduction to Pharmacology-I
- Drug administration and absorption
11Pharmacokinetics
Locus of actionreceptorsBound Free
TissuereservoirsBound Free
Systemiccirculation
Absorption
Excretion
Free drug
Bound drug
Metabolites
Biotransformation
12Pharmacokinetic Process-ADME
- Absorption
- Distribution
- Metabolism
- Excretion
- It is also called ADME process
- Elimination is the sum of M and E
13Drug administration
- Route and form in which drug is delivered to body
14Oral administration-most common route
- Governed by
- surface area for absorption, blood flow, physical
state of drug, concentration. - occurs via passive process.
- In theory weak acids optimally absorbed in
stomach, weak bases in intestine. - In reality the overall rate of absorption of
drugs is always greater in the intestine
15Subject to First Pass Effect
- pass through liver before reaching circulation
- undergo metabolism by liver
16Rate of Appearance in Blood
- Dependent on rate of dissolution
- Rate of absorption from GI tract
- timed release
- dissolve at different rates
- what about crushing?
17- enteric coating
- dissolve in alkaline fluid
- what about crushing?
18Forms of Oral Drugs
- liquids syrups, elixirs
- suspensions
- powders
- pills capsules, tablets
Fastest Slowest
19Buccal/Sublingual
- absorbed though oral mucus membranes in mouth
- buccal cheek
20Buccal/Sublingual
- sublingual (SL) under tongue
21Sublingual Administration
- Absorption from the oral mucosa has special
significance for certain drugs despite the small
surface area.Nitroglycerin - nonionic, very
lipid soluble.Because of venous drainage into
the superior vena cava, this route protects it
from first-pass liver metabolism.
22Parenteral
- Route other than alimentary canal
- intradermal (ID)
- subcutaneous (SC or SQ)
- intramuscular (IM)
- intravenous (IV)
- How quick is onset?
Slow
Fast
23Parenteral
- Intravenous (IV)
- directly into vein
- rapid onset of drug actions
- Fastest
24Intramuscular
- Rapid rate of absorption from aqueous solution,
depending on the muscle. - Perfusion of particular muscle influences the
rate of absorption gluteus vs. deltoid. - Slow constant absorption of drug when injected
in an oil solution or suspension.
25Subcutaneous
- Slow and constant absorption.
- Slow-release pellet may be implanted.
- Drug must not be irritating.
26Topical on the skin
- not absorbed in appreciable amounts
- have local effects(keep in mind large surface
area) - absorbed
- transdermal usually slowly over a day
27Example not absorbed
28Example absorbed
29Example Nitroglycerin
- Onset
- .. immediate
- . . 1-3 min
- . 40-60 min
30Inhalation
- systemic drugs intended to absorbed into blood
31Inhalation
- local drugs designed to act on lung tissue
32Intraarterial Administration
- Occasionally a drug is injected directly into an
artery to localize its effect to a particular
organ, e.g., for liver tumors, head/neck cancers.
- Requires great care and should be reserved for
experts.
33Intrathecal
- Necessary if the blood-brain barrier and
blood-CSF barrier impede entrance into the CNS.
Used for local or rapid effects of drugs on the
meninges or cerebrospinal axis, as in spinal
anesthesia or acute CNS infections.
34Rectal/Vaginal
- Suppositories
- Vaginal usually not absorbed
35Rectal/Vaginal
- Rectal absorbed
- May be useful when oral administration is
precluded by vomiting or when the patient is
unconscious. - some first pass effect,
- approximately 50 of
- the drug that is
- absorbed from the
- rectum will bypass
- the liver.
36Choice of route of drug administration
- Consider factors
- Concentration in blood
- Rapidity of onset
- Duration of effects
- Magnitude of effects
- Amount delivered
- Patient characteristics
37Absorption
- Process of drug leaving site of administration
38Important Properties AffectingDrug Absorption
- Chemical properties
- acid or base
- degree of ionization
- polarity
- molecular weight
- lipid solubility or...
- partition coefficient
- Physiologic variables
- gastric motility
- pH at the absorption site
- area of absorbing surface
- blood flow
- Pre-systemic elimination
- ingestion w/wo food
39Absorption
- Influenced by
- size thickness of absorbing surface
- GI tract
- large with single cell layer
- small bowel gt large bowel
40Surface
- Lung
- Large with single cell layer
- Mucus membranes
- Surface small with multiple cell layers
- Skin
- Surface large with multiple cell layers
41Surface
- blood supply to surface
- GI, lung, mucus membranes
- good blood supply
- skin variable
42Factors Influencing Absorption
- interaction of drug with surface characteristics
- e.g. skin
- low in water and lipid
43Factors Influencing Absorption
- amount of time in contact with surface
- concentration gradient
44Physicochemical Factors In Transfer of Drugs
Across Membranes
- Cell Membranes
- Passive Properties
- Carrier-Mediated Transport
45Cell Membranes
The character of biological membrane
Be composed of phospholipids and
proteins -----lipid soluble molecule can cross it
easily Has aqueous channel -----water and liquid
soluble molecule with little molecule weight can
cross it easily
46Membranes and Absorption
Lipid Bilayer
Small, uncharged
H2O, urea, CO2, O2, N2
Swoosh!
Large, uncharged
Glucose Sucrose
DENIED!
Small charged ions
H, Na, K, Ca2, Cl-, HCO3-
DENIED!
47Passive difusion
- Passive diffusion depends on movement down a
concentration gradient. -
481. Aqueous diffusion
- Water-soluble, small molecular mass drugs
- The force of it is the liquid static pressure or
osmotic pressure across the membrane - Through aqueous channels
49Molecular Size
- In general, smaller molecules diffuse more
readily across membranes than larger ones
(because the diffusion coefficient is inversely
related to the sq. root of the MW). This applies
to passive diffusion but NOT to specialized
transport mechanisms (active transport,
pinocytosis). - tight junction MW lt200 for diffusion.
- large fenestrations in capillaries MW 20K-30K.
502. Lipid diffusion
- The lipid-soluble drug molecule penetrates along
a concentration gradient by virtue of its
solubility in the lipid membrane
51Lipid-SolubilityOilWater Partition Coefficient
- The greater the partition coefficient, the
higher the lipid-solubility of the drug, and the
greater its diffusion across membranes.A
non-ionizable compound (or the non-ionized form
of an acid or a base) will reach an equilibrium
across the membrane that is proportional to its
concentration gradient.
52Absorbed fromstomach in1 hour( of dose)
50
580
40
52
30
20
1
10
Other things (MW, pKa) being equal, absorption
of these drugs is proportional to lipid
solubility.
0
barbital(pKa 7.8)
secobarbital(pKa 7.9)
thiopental(pKa 7.6)
533. Inization
- Most drugs are small (MW lt 1000) weak
electrolytes (acids/bases). This influences
passive diffusion since cell membranes are
hydrophobic lipid bilayers that are much more
permeable to the non-ionized forms of drugs.The
fraction of drug that is non-ionized depends on
its pKa, and the local biophase pH...
54- ionized polar water-soluble
- non-ionized less polar more lipid-soluble
-
- Think of an acid as having a carboxyl COOH /
COO_ - Think of a base as having an amino NH3 / NH2
- For both acids and bases, pKa acid
dissociation constant, the pH at which 50 of the
molecules are ionized. - Exampleweak acid aspirin (pKa 3.5)
- weak base morphine (pKa 8.0)
55Weak acid
Weak base
H
extracellular pH
H
BH
B
A-
HA
B
BH
HA
A-
intracellular pH
H
H
The pH on each side of the membrane determines
the equilibrium on each side
56A Useful Concept...
- Drugs tend to exist in the ionized form when
exposed to their pH-opposite chemical
environment. - Acids are increasingly ionized with increasing pH
(basic environment), whereas - Bases are increasingly ionized with decreasing pH
(acidic environment).
57basediazepam (3.3)chlordiazepaxide
(4.8)triamterene (6.1)cimetidine
(6.8)morphine (8.0)amantadine (10.1)
HB
acidcromolyn sodium (2.0)furosemide
(3.9)sulfamethoxazole (6.0)phenobarbital
(7.4)phenytoin (8.3)chlorthalidone (9.4)
HA
pH2467.4810
B
A-
58- Henderson-Hasselbalch Eqn.
- protonated log
pKa - pH - unprotonated
59Problem What percentage of phenobarbital (weak
acid, pKa 7.4)exists in the ionized form in
urine at pH 6.4?
take antilog of 1 to get the ratio between
non-ionized (HA) and ionized (A-) forms of the
drug
pKa - pH 7.4 - 6.4 1
antilog of 1 10
if pH pKa then HA A- if pH lt pKa, acid form
(HA) will always predominateif pH gt pKa, the
basic form (A-) will always predominate
Ratio of HA/A- 10/1 ionized A- / A-
HA X100 1 / (1 10) X 100 9 ionized
60Problem What percentage of cocaine (weak base,
pKa 8 .5)exists in the non-ionized form in the
stomach at pH 2.5?
pKa - pH 8.5 - 2.5 6
take antilog of 6 to get the ratio between
ionized (BH) and non-ionized (B) formsof the
drug
antilog of 6 1,000,000
if pH pKa then BH B if pH lt pKa, acid form
(BH) will always predominateif pH gt pKa, the
basic form (B) will always predominate
Ratio of BH/B 1,000,000/1 non-ionized
B/ (B BH) X100 1 X 10-4
non-ionized or 0.0001
61Moral of the story...
- Acidic drugs are best absorbed from acidic
environments
Basic drugs are best absorbed from basic
environments
62Other aspects.
- amphetamine (weak base, pKa 10)
- its actions can be prolonged by ingesting
bicarbonate to alkalinize the urine... - this will increase the fraction of amphetamine in
non-ionized form, which is readily reabsorbed
across the luminal surface of the kidney
nephron... - in overdose, you may acidify the urine to
increase kidney clearance of amphetamine.
63- Certain compounds may exist as strong
electrolytes. This means they are ionized at all
body pH values. They are poorly lipid soluble. - Ex
- strong acid glucuronic acid derivatives of
drugs. - strong base quarternary ammonium compounds
such as acetylcholine.
64Membrane Transfer
Passive diffusion
endocytosis
carrier-mediated
active
passive
ATP
ADP-Pi
65Special carriers
- Substances that are important for cell function
and too large or too insoluble in lipid to
diffuse passively through membranes, eg,
peptides, amino acids, glucose. - These kind of transport, unlike passive
diffusion, is saturable and inhibitable.
- Active transport is characterized by a
requirement for energy - Facilitated diffusion needs no energy
66Special carriers
- Carrier-mediated transport is important for some
drugs that are chemically related to endogenous
substances - The transporter proteins also mediate drug efflux
- P-glycoprotein /MDR1
- MRP transporters
- Function as a barrier system
- to protect cells
67P-glycoprotein
Epithelial cell in GI tract
- GI tract limit the absorption
- Kidney promote the renal excretion
- Liver promote the biliary excretion
- Brain limit entry to brain
Function as a barrier system to protect cells
68Facilitated Diffusion
- This is a carrier-mediated process that does NOT
require energy. In this process, movement of the
substance can NOT be against its concentration
gradient.Necessary for the transport of
endogenous compounds whose rate of movement
across membranes by simple diffusion would be too
slow.
69Active Transport
- Occurrence- neuronal membranes, choroid plexus,
renal tubule cells, hepatocytes - Characteristics
- - carrier-mediated- selectivity-
competitive inhibition by congeners- energy
requirement- saturable- movement against
concentration gradient - differences from facilitated diffusion
70Endocytosis, Exocytosis, Internalization
- Endocytosis (or pinocytosis) a portion of the
plasma membrane invaginates and then pinches off
from the surface to form an intracellular
vesicle. - Ex This is the mechanism by which thyroid
follicular cells, in response to TSH, take up
thyroglobulin (MW gt 500,000).