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TOXICOKINETICS 1 Toxicokinetics - the study of the time course of toxicant absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion How can we predict variability among individuals? How can we extrapolate from animal models to humans? Dosage Exposure Plasma Site of action Conc. Toxicokinetics Toxic Effects Toxicodynamics 2 Toxicokinetic (TK) processes ABSORPTION xenobiotic EXTERNAL MEMBRANE BARRIERS skin G.I. tract lungs DISTRIBUTION BLOOD PLASMA TISSUES pools depots sinks METABOLISM PHASE-1 Oxidation PHASE-2 conjugation EXCRETION KIDNEYS LIVER lungs saliva sweat breast milk 3 Disposition of Xenobiotics Ingestion Inhalation Intravenous Intraperitoneal Subcutaneous Gastrointestinal tract absorption Intramuscular Lung Dermal Liver Blood and lymph Bile extracellular fluid fat distribution Kidney Bladder feces Urine Lung Secretory Structures soft tissue Alveoli Expired Air body organs Secretions bone excretion 4 Structural model of cell membrane The ‘lipid sieve’ model explain how lipophilic small cpds can permeate through the membrane by passive diffusion HYDRO PHILE EXTERIOR HYDRO PHILE HYDRO PHILE polar heads HYDRO PHILE non-polar tails LIPOPHIL E Phospholipid Bilayer hydrophilic cpds cannot permeate unless there is a specific membrane transport channel or pump. INTERIOR FACILITATED DIFFUSION OR ACTIVE TRANSPORT HYDRO PHILE PASSIVE DIFFUSION LIPOPHIL E 5 Mechanism of Membrane Permeation 1. 2. 3. 4. Passive diffusion Active transport Facilitated transport Pinocytosis 6 Transfer of Chemicals across Membranes PASSAGE ACROSS MEMBRANES Passive Facilitated Active Passive transport determined by: - Permeability of surface - Concentration gradient - Surface area Permeability depends on: For cell membranes: - Lipid solubility - pH of medium - pK of chemical For endothelium size, shape and charge of chemical 7 Uptake by Passive diffusion • Uncharged molecules may diffuse along conc. gradient until equilibrium is reached • No substrate specific • Small MW < 0.4 nm (e.g. CO, N20, HCN) can move through cell pores • Lipophilic chemicals may diffuse through the lipid bilayer 8 Rate of Absorption The rate of absorption determines the time of onset and the degree of acute toxicity. This is largely because time to peak (Tmax) and maximum concentration (Cmax) after each exposure depend on the rate of absorption. Rate the following processes in order of fastest to slowest: INTRAVENOUS> INHALATION >ORAL > DERMAL EXPOSURE. 9 Factors Affecting Absorption Determinants of Passive Transfer (lipid solubility, pH, pK, area, concentration gradient). Blood flow Dissolution in the aqueous medium surrounding the absorbing surface. 10 Factors Affecting GI Absorption Disintegration of dosage form and dissolution of particles Chemical stability of chemical in gastric and intestinal juices and enzymes Rate of gastric emptying Motility and mixing in GI tract Presence and type of food 11 Lungs Absorption For gases, vapors and volatile liquids, aerosols and particles In general: large surface area, thin barrier, high blood flow rapid absorption Blood:air partition coefficient – influence of respiratory rate and blood flow Blood:tissue partition coefficient 12 Lungs Absorption REMOVAL OF PARTICLES Physical Lymph Phagocytosis Absorption of Aerosols and Particles: 1- Particle Size 2- Water solubility of the chemical present in the aerosol or particle 13 Airway anatomy bronchial tree trachea • • diffusion distance: ~20 mm total exchange gas exchange area: ~80 m2 14 Airway anatomy trachea alveoli capillaries bronchial tree • • diffusion distance blood/air: ~20 mm total exchange gas exchange area: ~80 m2 15 Absorption Area in the Respiratory System Nasopharynge 5-30 µm Trachea Bronchi Bronchioles 1-5 µm Alveolar Region 1 µm 16 Skin Absorption Must cross several cell layers (stratum corneum, epidermis, dermis) to reach blood vessels. Factors important here are: lipid solubility hydration of skin site (e.g. sole of feet vs. scrotum) 17 Other Routes of Exposure Intraperitoneal large surface area, vascularized, first pass effect. Intramuscular, subcutaneous, intradermal: absorption through endothelial pores into the circulation; blood flow is most important + other factors Intravenous 18 Bioavailability Definition: the fraction of the administered dose reaching the systemic circulation for i.v.: 100% for non i.v.: ranges from 0 to 100% e.g. lidocaine bioavailability 35% due to destruction in gastric acid and liver metabolism First Pass Effect 19 FIRST PASS EFFECT Intestinal vs. gastric absorption Wilkinson, NEJM 2005 20 Extent of Absorption or Bioavailability Destroyed in gut Not absorbed Destroyed by gut wall Destroyed by liver Dose to systemic circulation 21 Principle For xenobiotics taken by routes other than the iv, the extent of absorption and the bioavailability must be understood in order to determine whether a certain exposure dose will induce toxic effects or not. It will also explain why the same dose may cause toxicity by one route but not the other. 22 Distribution Distribution is second phase of TK process defines where in the body a xenobiotic will go after absorption Perfusion-limited tissue distribution perfusion rate defines rate of blood flow to organs highly perfused tissues (often more vulnerable) liver, kidneys, lung, brain poorly perfused tissues (often less vulnerable) skin, fat, connective tissues, bone, muscle (variable) 23 Distribution into body compartments • Plasma 3.5 liters. (heparin, plasma expanders) • Extracellular fluid 14 liters. (tubocurarine, charged polar compounds) • Total body water 40 liters. (ethanol) • Transcellular small. CSF, eye, fetus (must pass tight junctions) 24 Distribution • Rapid process relative to absorption and elimination • Extent depends on - blood flow - size, M.W. of molecule - lipid solubility and ionization - plasma protein binding - tissue binding 25 Distribution Initial and later phases: initial determined by blood flow later determined by tissue affinity Examples of tissues that store chemicals: fat for highly lipid soluble compounds bone for lead 26 Volume of Distribution (Vd) Volume into which a drug appears to distribute with a concentration equal to its plasma concentration Amount of drug in body Vd = Concentration in Plasma 27 Examples of apparent Vd’s for some drugs Drug L/Kg L/70 kg Sulfisoxazole 0.16 11.2 Phenytoin 0.63 44.1 Phenobarbital 0.55 38.5 Diazepam 2.4 168 7 490 Digoxin 28 Distribution Blood Brain Barrier – characteristics: 1. No pores in endothelial membrane 2. Transporter in endothelial cells 3. Glial cells surround endothelial cells 4. Less protein concentration in interstitial fluid Passage across Placenta 29 Normal blood capillaries most capillaries are fenestrated small gaps in capillary wall not tightly sealed allows paracellular permeation of small plasma solutes hydrophiles can pass thru capillary wall into tissue ECF must be smaller than 100 A lipophiles cannot easily permeate capillary wall by paracellular permeation mostly bound to plasma proteins permeate capillary wall by passive diffusion in free plasma phase 30 Brain capillaries: blood-brain barrier (BBB) brain capillaries are unfenestrated -- no gaps cell membrane of capillary endothelium cells sealed shut tight intercellular junctions constitute the blood brain barrier (BBB) paracellular permeation of plasma solutes is impossible hydrophiles dissolved in blood typically cannot pass through the BBB into brain lipophiles can easily permeate the BBB by transcellular permeation (passive diffusion) 31 Capillary structure General circulation Central nervous system: ‘blood brain barrier’ Endothelial cell Tight junction Basal membrane (porous) Astrocyte 32 Elimination Includes all mechanisms for removing xenobiotics from the body Kel is the elimination rate constant One compartment model Slope = -kel/2.3 Two Compartment model = distribution Constant slope = ß/-2.3 and is the elimination rate constant Is calculated after pseudoequilibrium has been established 33 Clearance (CL) Defined rate xenobiotic eliminated from the body Can be defined for various organs in the body Sum of all routes of elimination CLtotal = CLliver + CLkidney + CLintestine 34 Elimination of chemicals from the body KIDNEY LIVER filtration secretion metabolism excretion (reabsorption) LUNGS OTHERS exhalation mother's milk sweat, saliva etc. 35 Elimination by the Kidney Excretion - major 1) glomerular filtration glomerular structure, size constraints, protein binding 2) tubular reabsorption/secretion - acidification/alkalinization, - active transport, competitive/saturable organic acids/bases, -protein binding Metabolism - minor 36 Nephron Structure (A.C. Guyton, Textbook of Medical Physiology, Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders Co.; 1991 37 Elimination by the Liver Metabolism - major 1) Phase I and II reactions 2) Function: change a lipid soluble to more water soluble molecule to excrete in kidney 3) Possibility of active metabolites with same or different properties as parent molecule Biliary Secretion – active transport, 4 categories 38 The enterohepatic shunt/ circulation Drug Liver Bile Bile formation duct Biotransformation; Hydrolysis by glucuronide beta glucuronidase gall bladder produced Portal circulation Gut 39 EXCRETION BY OTHER ROUTES LUNG - For gases and volatile liquids by diffusion. Excretion rate depends on partial pressure of gas and blood:air partition coefficient. MOTHER’S MILK a) By simple diffusion mostly. Milk has high lipid content and is more acidic than plasma (traps alkaline fat soluble substances). b) Important for 2 reasons: transfer to baby, transfer from animals to humans. OTHER SECRETIONS – sweat, saliva, etc.. minor contribution 40 Toxicokinetic parameters Vol of distribution V = DOSE / Co Plasma clearance CL = Kel .Vd plasma half-life (t1/2) t1/2 = 0.693 / Kel or directly from graph Bioavailability F = (AUC)x / (AUC)iv 41 CONCLUSION The absorption, distribution and elimination of a chemical are qualitatively similar in all individuals. However, for several reasons, the quantitative aspects may differ considerably. Each person must be considered individually and treated accordingly. 42