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Pharmacology Review • Pharmacology is the study of substances that interact with living systems through chemical processes • Especially by binding regulatory molecules and activating or inhibiting normal body processes Drug • Most drugs interact with a molecule or protein that play a regulatory role in living systems Drugs must have specificity • Drugs that interact with receptors must be appropriate size, charge, and shape to interact with a given receptor Drugs must have delivery • A drug must be able to be transported to site of action Drugs must have elimination • Drugs must be removed and excreted at a reasonable rate The Nature of Drugs • Most drugs are weak acids or weak bases pKa • The pKa is the pH at which the molecule or drug is balanced between the uncharged (lipid soluble) and the charged (water soluble) form The Nature of Drugs • Most drugs are weak acids or weak bases because only subtle changes in pH are required to shift them back and forth: • - lipid soluble (easily passes cell membranes) • - water soluble (does not pass without transport) Henderson-Hasselbach • Log [RH]/[R] = pKa-pH pH • Potential of hydrogen ion (proton) in water • pH = 7 neutral • pH> 7 basic • pH< 7 acidic pH • Physiologic pH is about 7.35 • - slightly alkaline The Nature of Drugs • Drugs interact with receptors by means of chemical forces or bonds Nature of Receptors • Most receptors are proteins which mediate the action of endogenous chemical signals Affinity • How tightly the receptor binds to the drug Receptors • Receptors are responsible for selectivity of drug action The Nature of Drugs • Drugs interact with receptors by means of chemical forces of bonds: • Covalent – very strong,usually irreversible The Nature of Drugs • Drugs interact with receptors by means of chemical forces or bonds: • - Electrostatic – pretty strong • - ionic groups (+ and – attract) • - hydrogen bonds The nature of drugs • Hydrophilic or lipophilic – weak Drug-Body Interactions • • • • Pharmacodynamics - actions of drugs on the body Pharmacokinetics - actions of the body on the drug Pharmacodynamic Principles • Agonist drugs bind to and activate the receptor • - opening ion channel • - initiating second messenger Pharmacodynamic Principles • Antagonists bind to receptor and prevent activation of the receptor Agonist • An agonist is any drug that binds to a receptor and activates the receptor • In many receptors, agonist leaving the binding site deactivates the receptor • In other receptors, agonist permanently activates the receptor Pharmacologic Antagonist • A pharmacologic antagonist is any drug that binds to a receptor and prevents the activation of the receptor Competitive Antagonist • A competitive antagonist is any pharmacologic antagonist that “competes” with the binding of agonist at binding site Noncompetitive Antagonist • A noncompetitive antagonist is any pharmacologic antagonist that binds to a site on the receptor other than the agonist binding site Chemical Antagonist • A chemical antagonist is any drug that binds directly to an agonist and deactivates the agonist Physiologic Antagonist • Physiologic antagonism means the drug is reduced by other physiologic pathways. • Epinephrine is the physiologic antagonist of histamine Pharmacodynamic Principles • Effect of drug may persist long after drug dissociates from receptor Natural Curves • The interaction between a drug or ligand and it’s receptor can be described by a curve • Because drugs mimic the natural regulatory processes, their effect follows a natural curve Drug Concentration and Response • Response usually increases in proportion to dose • As dose increases, response increment diminishes • At some dose there is no further increase in response Agonist Dose/Response Curve Potency vs Efficacy Efficacy – refers to the effect of a drug. The more effect, the more efficacious the drug Potency – refers to the concentration of a drug needed for the effect. The less the concentration required, the more potent the drug. Potency and Efficacy - are used interchangeably by medical personnel Quantal Dose Effect Curves • Quantal dose effect curves implies a binary or on/off response to a drug • Either the effect is achieved or not achieved EC 50 • EC 50 is the concentration of drug required to achieve half of the expected response ED 50 • ED 50 is the dose of the drug required to achieve half of the expected response TD 50 • TD 50 is the dose of the drug required to achieve toxicity in half of the subjects given the drug LD 50 • LD 50 is the dose of the drug required to be lethal to half of the subjects given the drug T½ • T1/2 or half life is the amount of time required to lower the concentration for the drug by half Route of administration • How the drug is administered affects bioavailability Bioavailability • Bioavailability describes the concentration of drug in systemic blood in relation to the amount of drug given PO • PO – by mouth • - blood from the GI tract goes directly to the liver first • - rarely 100% IV • IV – intravenous • - drug goes directly into the bloodstream IM • IM – intramuscular – into muscle • - to out of muscle deposited to blood SC • SC – subcutaneously – under skin • - out of subcutaneous fat deposited to blood PR • PR – by rectum • - to liver via GI blood Inhalation • Inhalation – directly to lungs • - to bloodstream Transdermal • Transdermal – applied to skin, crosses skin to systemic blood supply • e.g. nicotine patches Topical • Topical – applied to skin, action intended locally at the site of administration Intranasal • Intranasal – into and across nasal mucosa • - to bloodstream • - to base of brain (pituitary) Intrathecal • Intrathecal – into the cerebrospinal fluid • - foramen magnum – hole skull/spine • - to brain via CSF Epidural • Epidural – outside of the spinal dura • - spinal anesthesia Intraarticular • Intraarticular – into the joint space • - steroid injection into knee First Pass Effect • The first pass effect: • - all drugs absorbed by GI tract enter the portal blood supply and go directly to the liver • - the liver metabolizes many drugs before they enter into systemic blood supply Prodrug • Many drugs are administered in their inactive forms • When drugs make their first pass through the liver, they are converted into their active forms Permeation • Permeation is the penetration of drug into the tissues Mechanisms of Permeation • • • • Aqueous diffusion Lipid diffusion Special carriers Endocytosis and exocytosis Transformation • Transformation is the chemical changing of the drug by the body Transformation • Liver transformation • Peripheral transformation • GI transformation Phase I Reactions Oxidation • Phase I involves conversion to water soluble metabolites • - CYP • - Cytochrome P450 Phase II Reactions Conjugation • If not polar enough, they will undergo Phase II reactions during which they are conjugated to highly polar groups • In reality many substances can undergo either transformation in any order Elimination • Elimination is the removal of drug from the body Renal vs. Hepatic Elimination • Not all drugs need to be transformed by the liver to be eliminated • Urination – elimination by kidneys • Defecation – hepatic elimination via bile • Most drugs require both Volume of Distribution • Amount of drug in body relative to concentration of drug in blood Clearance • The rate of elimination in relation to the drug concentration • CL = Rate of elimination/Concentration Drug Accumulation • Whenever drug doses are repeated, the drug will accumulate until dosing stops • If the dosing interval is shorter than 4 halflives accumulation will occur Maintenance Dose • Dosing Rate = Clearance x Target Concentration Loading Dose • Loading Dose = VD x TC