El Helalyaالمؤسسة
تاريخ التسجيل : 08/08/2008
| موضوع: AlL AbOuT >>>>DRUG ELIMINATION >>>IT IS REALLY GOOD> الأحد 6 يونيو 2010 - 23:32 | |
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El Helalyaالمؤسسة
تاريخ التسجيل : 08/08/2008
| موضوع: رد: AlL AbOuT >>>>DRUG ELIMINATION >>>IT IS REALLY GOOD> الأحد 6 يونيو 2010 - 23:33 | |
| Aspirin Elimination
Slide of aspirin plasma concentration as a function of time after 0.25, 1 or 2g. At higher doses the metabolism of aspirin is reduced by saturation. The elimination rate constant (as represented by the slope) is reduced
Multiphasic Drug Elimination
Slide of pentobarbital plasma concentration versus time illustrating the multiphasic distribution pattern. From a plasma concentration time curve it may appear that this drug is rapidly eliminated from the body. Actually little of the drug is eliminated with much of it being distributed in various tissues of the body. Here distribution is a major factor affecting the overall kinetics of this drug. By looking further we can see the real picture
Tissue Concentration versus Time
Slide showing pentobarbital concentrations in various tissues. This illustrates the slow distribution of some drugs into and out of various tissues. Brain and other rapidly perfused tissues rapidly lose drug while other tissues are building up drug concentrations. Eventually significant amounts of drug will be collected in fat tissue from which it may only slowly be removed. The green line represents concentrations in adipose tissue (poorly perfused), the red line represents concentrations in viscera (highly prefused lean tissue), the yellow line represents concentrations in lean tissue (poorly perfused) and the blue line represents concentrations in blood
Distribution
Slide showing other distribution mechanisms. Methods by which drug is kept in the body for extended action. pH, protein binding and fat storage are three major processes by which drug may be kept within the body. These are mechanisms by which drugs can be distributed throughout the body, protected from elimination, and cause a more prolonged activity
IV Bolus One Compartment Model
Definition
Pharmacokinetics is the study of drug and/or metabolite kinetics in the body. It deals with a mathematical description of the rates of drug movement into, within and exit from the body. It also includes the study of drug metabolism or biotransformation rates. The body is a very complex system and a drug undergoes many steps as it is being absorbed, distributed through the body, metabolized or excreted (ADME
The drug also interacts with receptors and causes therapeutic and/or toxic responses. Although the details of drug kinetics are complicated it is fortunate that we can often approximate drug kinetic processes using "simple" mathematical models
Assumptions
We will start the course with a one compartment - linear model. Also, we will first consider drug kinetics after a rapid intravenous injection, an IV bolus injection. According to this model we will consider the body to behave as a single well- mixed container. To use this model mathematically we need to make a number of assumptions. One compartment
The drug in the blood is in rapid equilibrium with drug in the extravascular tissues. The drug concentration may not be equal in each tissue or fluid however we will assume that they are proportional to the concentration of drug in the blood at all times. This is not an exact representation however it is useful for a number of drugs to a reasonable approximation. Rapid Mixing
We also need to assume that the drug is mixed instantaneously in blood or plasma. The actual time taken for mixing is usually very short, within a few of minutes, and in comparison with normal sampling times it is insignificant. We usually don't sample fast enough to see drug mixing in the blood. Linear Model
We will assume that drug elimination follows first order kinetics. First order kinetics means that the rate of change of drug concentration by any process is directly proportional to the drug concentration remaining to undertake that process. Remember first order kinetics is an assumption of a linear model not a one compartment model. If we have a linear if we double the dose, the concentration will double at each time point
Linear Model - First Order Kinetics
First-order kinetics To illustrate first order kinetics we might consider what would happen if we were to give a drug by iv bolus injection, collect blood samples at various times and measure the plasma concentrations of the drug. We might see a steady decrease in concentration as the drug is eliminated
Rate versus Cp
If we measure the slope of this curve at a number of times we are actually measuring the rate of change of concentration at each time point, ΔCp/Δ, represented by the straight line
Now if we plot this rate of change versus the plasma concentration, for each data point, we will get a straight line when first order kinetics are obeyed
as below
This behavior can be expressed mathematically as
One Compartment Model
دمتم فى امان الله الموضوع : AlL AbOuT >>>>DRUG ELIMINATION >>>IT IS REALLY GOOD> المصدر :منتديات تقى الإسلامية الكاتب: El Helalya |
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الجنه تنادينيالاشراف العام
تاريخ التسجيل : 16/05/2010
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واسلاماهالمراقبة العامة
تاريخ التسجيل : 23/06/2009
| موضوع: رد: AlL AbOuT >>>>DRUG ELIMINATION >>>IT IS REALLY GOOD> الجمعة 8 يوليو 2011 - 19:57 | |
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