1 General Pharmacology
1 General Pharmacology
1 General Pharmacology
GENERAL PHARMACOLOGY
Pharmacology
• It is the science that deals with drugs
• It is derived from the Greek terms; "Pharmacon" = drug and
"logos" = science
• It is divided into 2 branches: Pharmacokinetic and Pharmaccdynamic.
Drug
• It is a chemical substance that alters body functions
• It can be used for diagnosis, prevention or treatment of disease.
Drug Nomenclature
Pharmacodynamics
• These are the effects of the drugs on the body
Pharmacokinetics
• These are the effects of the body on the drugs.
•They include: Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism and Excretion
(ADME).
Pharmacodynamics
Pharmacokinetics
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General Pharmacology
PHARMACOKINETICS
• Pharmacokinetic describes what the body does to the drug.
• It is the quantitative studying of drug Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism
and Excretion (ADME).
• Importance of Pharmacokinetics :
Dose adjustment according to :
1. Body size
2. Body functions (liver, heart, kidney)
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General Pharmacology
Drug Absorption
Absorption is the passage of drug from the site of administration to the blood.
Factors affecting drug absorption
l) Drug properties :
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General Pharmacology
Ad
dvantages of
o slow rellease prep
parations
(drrug A):
• Longer acction
• Less frequuent adminnistration
• Less adverrse reactionn (low peaak level)
3) Conditions
C s at site off administrration :
a. Blood
B flow
w:
Deecreased bloood flow inn subcutanneous tissuee ↓ the ratee of drug abbsorption e.g.:
e
P
Prokinetic d
drugs ↑ thee gut motiliity Æ ↑ absorption off drugs e.gg.
mettoclopramiide ↑ absorrption of errgotamine in
i treatmennt of migraaine.
c. GIT
G conten
nt :
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General Pharmacology
Bioavailability
• The fraction of unchanged drugs reaching systemic circulation after any
route of administration.
• - IV bioavailability = 100%
• It is calculated by dividing the Area Under the blood concentration-time
Curve (AUC) after any route of administration by that after IVI.
IV
Oral
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General Pharmacology
Drugs Distribution
• After a drug is absorbed, it is distributed between blood and tissues. The
drug passes through body compartments (plasma, interstitial, intracellular)
which are separated by capillary walls and cell membranes.
Importance of Vd
Vd can be used to calculate the loading dose (LD):
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General Pharmacology
Drug Biotransformation
(Metabolism)
Definition.: Changes that occur to drugs after absorption until excretion.
Aim : to change lipid soluble drugs into water soluble (polar) metabolites Æ
easily excreted.
Results of drug metabolism :
Drug metabolism Æ formation of :
1• Inactive metabolites (most drugs).
2• Active metabolites like the parent drugs e.g. diazepam metabolites.
3• Active metabolites from inactive drugs (prodrugs) e.g. prednisone
(prodrug) Æ prednisolone. Thus prednisolone is used instead of
prednisone in liver disease or when applied locally.
Sites of drug metabolism:
• The Liver is the main site .
• Other sites include kidney, lung , GIT , plasma , brain ,eye and skin.
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General Pharmacology
b. Phase II (synthetic) :
It is the addition of endogenous polar substance to a drug or metabolites of
phase I (conjugation) to form water soluble inactive metabolites e.g.
glucuronidation, acetylation, and methylation.
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General Pharmacology
Drug clearance
• Definition: clearance is the volume of plasma from which a drug is cleared
per unit of time.
• It determines the relation between drug elimination rate and drug
concentration.
• Clearance = Rate of elimination / Drug concentration
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General Pharmacology
Steady State Concentraation (Csss)
It iss the conceentration of
o the drug in plasmaa when the rate of abbsorption = the
ratee of eliminaation.
Elim
mination half
h life ( t 1/2)
It iss the time required
r too reduce thee plasma concentratioon of the ddrug to the half
of its initial cooncentratioon.
C
Conc.
1/2 C
T im
me
{
t1/2
* Calculation
C : t1/2 = 0.6693Vd /Cl
* Im
mportancee of t1/2 :
1) t1/2 shows the
t time reequired forr a drug to reach CSS
S after its administraation
.Thhe drug neeeds 4-5 timees its half life
l to reacch its CSS.
m
mg/dl
18.75
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General Pharmacology
2) t1/2 shows the time required for a drug to be removed from blood after
stoppage of drug, usually it takes 4-5 time half life.
• Most drugs are given at intervals equal to their t1/2 to avoid interdose
fluctuation in blood level away from CSS.
• Drugs with long t1/2 e.g Digoxin (in treatment of heart failure) → given
as initial loading dose followed by maintenance dose.
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General Pharmaco
ology
P
PHARMA
ACODY
YNAMIC
CS
Dose-resp
ponse Reelationsh
hip
The dose-respoonse relationship can be
b represen
nted graphically by 2 types of cu
urves:
quanntitative (grraded) andd qualitative (All/Non
ne) dose-ressponse curvve:
Paraameters th
hat can bee obtained from
f the graded
g doose-respon
nse curve:
1 Efficacy (Emax): iss the maxim
1. mal effect produced
p byy the drug
2 Potency of the drugg is assessedd from ED50
2.
ED500: it is dosee that produuces 50% of
o the maxim
mal responnse.
m potent the drug iss. 1
Thee lower the ED50 the more
1:
It shhould be noted that
t low ED50 means
m a more potent
p drug but it does not esseentially mean a more effective drug
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General Pharmacology
II. All/None dose-response curve is obtained if the percentage of patients who
respond to the drug is depicted against log the dose.
1. ED50: It is the dose that cures 50% of cases. It is used for comparison between
drugs e.g. drug with a lower ED50 is > potent than that with a higher ED50.
2. LD50: It is the dose,that kills 50% of animal. It gives an idea about the
absolute toxicity of the drug i.e. the drug with lower LD50 is considered more
toxic than the drug with higher LD50. The dose used should not exceed 10%
of the estimated LD50.
• It gives an idea about the safety of the drug: if the TI is large, i.e. the
LD50 is much higher than the ED50 Æ the drug is safer.
efficacy of the drug is assessed by the Emax and not the ED50.
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General Pharmacology
1. Receptor-Mediated Mechanisms
• Receptors2 are specific cellular macromolecules (usually proteins) that
interact with a ligand (binding) to produce a response.
SIGNALING MECHANISMS
• The most important signal transduction systems are:
1. Ion Channels (for fast neurotransmitters)
• Receptors are ion-selective channels in the plasma membrane.
Binding of agonist to the receptor →opening of the channel → alteration
in membrane potential or change in intracellular ion concentration, both
resulting in change in cell activity, e.g. nicotinic Ach receptors
(combined Na+/K+ channels)
2
The pharmacological actions mediated by the receptors are characterized by sensitivity (i.e. very small
conc. of ligand is enough to elicit the action), selectivity (i.e. each receptor has the type of ligand that
can interact with it) & specificity (i.e. they elicit the same response each time they interact with ligand).
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General Pharmacology
2. Receptors linked to Tyrosine Kinase (RTKs)
• Binding of insulin causes 2 single tyrosine-kinases receptors to aggregate
into a dimmer with subsequent autophosphorylation → activation →
cellular response.
Examples of G Proteins
a. Gs (stimulatory) linked to β-receptors resulting in increased cAMP.
b. Gi (inhibitory) linked to α2 and M2 receptors resulting in decreased cAMP.
c. Gq linked to α1 and M1 & M3 receptors liberating (diacyl-glycerol) DAG
and inositol triphosphate-3 (IP3).
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General Pharmacology
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General Pharmacology
II. Nonreceptor-Mediated Mechanisms
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General Pharmaco
ology
Ligaands bin
nding
Typ
pes of ligands
1. Agonist
A
I
Interacts w the recceptor (affinnity) activaating it (effficacy) → pharmaco
with ologic
e
effect, i.e. it has aff
ffinity and
d efficacy, e.g. acetyylcholine ((Ach) activ
vates
n
nicotinic reeceptors → depolarizzation → sk
keletal musscle contraaction.
2. Antagoniist
I
Interacts w
with the reeceptor wiithout activ
vation (aff hout efficacy),
ffinity with
T
There are 2 types of receptor
r anntagonists:
Com
mpetitive Antagonist
A t Noncomp
petitive An
ntagonist
• Antagonist
A competess with the
t • Anttagonist biinds irreveersibly to the
aggonist for the samee recognitiion reco
ognition sitte of the reeceptor or bind
b
siite of the reeceptor. to an
a allostericc site.
• Duration
D deepends on plasma
p connc. • Durration of antagonism
a m dependss on
off agonist annd antagonnist. the rate of turnnover of thhe receptor.
• Causes
C paraallel shift too the right in • Cau
uses downw
ward & nonn-parallel
doose-responnse curve & no changge shifft in the dose-responsse curve &
inn Emax decrrease in Emax
m (maxim
mum respon
nse)
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General Pharmacology
N.B. the action of a ligand can also be reversed by non receptor antagonists
Examples:
• Chemical antagonists: interact chemically with the agonist away from
receptor, e.g. negative charges on heparin are neutralized by positive
charges on protamine sulfate (heparin antidote).
• Physiological antagonists: one drug antagonizes the effect of another
by acting on a different receptor to induce the opposite action e.g. β2-
bronchodilator effect of epinephrine antagonizes H1-bronchconstrictor
effect of histamine.
• The number of receptors is not constant but the receptors are cycling
(old receptors are internalized inside the cell and the new ones are
externalized to the outside) and their number is continuously
changing depending on the rate of recycling.
• Binding of the agonist → increases receptor internalization Æ ↓
number of recruited receptors [down regulation] while binding of the
antagonist Æ ↑ the number of recruited receptors [up regulation].
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General Pharmacology
Tolerance
• It is reduced responsiveness to the drug on repeated administration so that
higher doses are needed to produce the same effect.
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General Pharmacology
Type A (Augmented)
a. Intolerance (at doses < therapeutic): tinnitus after a single, small aspirin dose.
b. Side effect (occurs at therapeutic dose) e.g.
i. 1ry pharmacological action e.g. dry mouth from antihistamines.
ii. 2ry pharmacological action e.g. thrush3 while taking antibiotics.
c. Overdose (at doses slightly > therapeutic): seizure with lidocaine.
d. Toxic effect (at very high doses) e.g. hepatotoxicity with acetaminophen.
Type B (Bizarre)
1. Hypersensitivity (Allergic reactions)
• Immune-based adverse reactions. They are not dose-related but are
induced by prior contact with drugs that act as antigens.
2. Idiosyncrasy
• Genetically-mediated adverse effects e.g. Favism.
Type C (Continuous)
• Adverse effects occurring on chronic use of drugs e.g. analgesic nephropathy
or corticosteroids-induced diabetes.
3
Due to overgrowth of candidal infection.
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General Pharmacology
Type D (Delayed):
• This adverse effect may occur even after stopping drug. There are 3 types
a. Mutagenicity: drug-induced gene abnormalities; with metronidazole.
b. Carcinogenicity: drug-induced neoplasme.g. radioactive drugs.
c. Teratogenesis (teratos = monster; genesis = production): induction of fetal
abnormalities. The most vulnerable period is weeks 3-10 intrauterine life.
e.g. Thalidomide→ phocomelia, Tetracyclines→ dental hypoplasia.
PHARMACOGENETIC DISORDERS
These are genetic abnormalities that are revealed only by the effect of drugs.
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General Pharmacology
Succinylcholine Apnea
• The skeletal muscle relaxant succinyl choline may cause respiratory muscle
paralysis with apnea in genetically predisposed patients. This is due to failure
of its breakdown due to a genetic defect in pseudocholine esterase enzyme
responsible for its breakdown.
Malignant Hyperthermia
++
• Genetic disorder in which skeletal muscles fail to sequester Ca in
sarcoplasmic reticulum following administration of succinylcholine and
halothane. This results in marked muscle rigidity & rise of body temperature.
DRUG ALLERGY
• It is an acquired condition due to repeated exposure to the drugs mediated by
immunogenic mechanisms.
Mechanisms and Types of allergic reactions
Type II Reaction
• IgG or IgM antibodies are fixed to a circulating blood cell → complement-
dependent lysis. e.g., agranulocytosis (with chloramphenicol).
DRUG INTERACTIONS
• Drug interactions occur when one drug modifies the action of another drug in
the body. Clinically important drug interactions occur with:
I. Pharmacokinetic Interactions
A. Interactions at site of absorption
• Tetracyclines chelate metals → ↓ absorption of Ca2+, Mg2+, &
Al3+containing antacids.
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General Pharmacology
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General Pharmacology
A. Enhancement Interactions
• Summation (1+1= 2) i.e. additive effect. Example: a barbiturate and
another sedative given together before surgery to relax the patient.
• Synergism4 (1+1= >2): when two drugs work together. Example:
sulfonamides plus trimethoprim act synergistically to block two sequential
steps in bacterial folic acid metabolism.
• Potentiation (a +b= B): occurs when two drugs are taken together and
one of them intensifies the action of the other. Example: beta lactamase
inhibitors with beta lactamase sensitive penicillins.
4
The word synergism comes from two Greek words: erg meaning "to work", and syn meaning
"together"; hence, synergism is a "working together".
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General Pharmacology
- During the 2nd and 3rd trimesters drugs may cause physiological
abnormality. Examples :
1-Morphine → neonatal respiratory depression (asphyxia neonatorum)
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General Pharmacology
- Most drugs given to the mother pass from maternal plasma to breast milk by
passive diffusion except heparin & insulin which are too large .
- The milk is more acidic and contains more fat (than plasma ) → retention of
basic (ionized) and lipophilic drugs.
- Drugs are diluted in the mother's body Æthe dose of the drug reaching the baby
is usually low.
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