Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of...

37
Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology www.med.howard.edu/pharmacology 202.806.6311

Transcript of Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of...

Page 1: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Routes of Drug AdministrationRoutes of Drug Administration

Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D.Department of Pharmacologywww.med.howard.edu/pharmacology 202.806.6311

Page 2: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Drug Absorption

Absorption is the process by which a drug enters the bloodstream without being chemically altered or

The movement of a drug from its site of application into the blood or lymphatic system

Page 3: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Drug Absorption Factors which influence the rate of

absorption types of transport the physicochemical properties of the

drug protein binding routes of administration dosage forms circulation at the site of absorption concentration of the drug

Page 4: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Drug Absorption

The rate at which a drug reaches it site of action depends on:Absorption - involves the

passage of the drug from its site of administration into the blood

Distribution - involves the delivery of the drug to the tissues

Page 5: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Drug Absorption Mechanisms of solute

transport across membranes passive diffusion filtration and bulk flow endocytosis ion-pairing active transport

Drug Absorption animation

Page 6: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.
Page 7: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Ion Trapping cont:Body fluids where a pH difference from blood pH will favor trapping or reabsorption: stomach contents small intestine breast milk aqueous humor (eye) vaginal secretions prostatic secretions

Page 8: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Ion Trapping:

Kidney: Nearly all drugs filtered at the glomerulus: Most drugs in a lipid-soluble form will be absorbed by passive diffusion. To increase excretion: change the urinary pH to favor the charged form of the drug:• Weak acids: excreted faster in alkaline pH (anion form favored) • Weak bases: excreted faster in acidic pH (cation form favored)

Page 9: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Lipid-Water Partition Coefficient

The ratio of the concentration of the drug in two immiscible phases: a nonpolar liquid or organic solvent (representing the membrane); and an aqueous buffer, pH 7.4 (representing the plasma)

Page 10: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Lipid-Water Partition Coefficient

The higher the lipid/water p.c. the greater the rate of transfer across the membrane polarity of a drug, by increasing

ionization will the lipid/ water p.c. polarity of a drug, suppression of

ionization will the lipid/ water p.c.

Page 11: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Routes of Drug Administration

The route of administration (ROA) that is chosen may have a profound effect upon the speed and efficiency with which the drug acts

ImportantImportantInfoInfo

Page 12: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

The possible routes of drug entry into the body may be divided into two classes:

EnteralParenteral

Page 13: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Enteral Routes

Enteral - drug placed directly in the GI tract:sublingual - placed under the

tongueoral - swallowing (p.o., per os)rectum - Absorption through the

rectum

Page 14: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Sublingual/Buccal

Some drugs are taken as smaller tablets which are held in the mouth or under the tongue.

Advantages rapid absorption drug stability avoid first-pass effect

Page 15: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Sublingual/Buccal

Disadvantages inconvenient small doses unpleasant taste of some drugs

Page 16: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Oral

Advantages Convenient - can be self- administered,

pain free, easy to take Absorption - takes place along the whole

length of the GI tract Cheap - compared to most other

parenteral routes

Page 17: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Oral

DisadvantagesSometimes inefficient - only part

of the drug may be absorbedFirst-pass effect - drugs

absorbed orally are initially transported to the liver via the portal vein

irritation to gastric mucosa - nausea and vomiting

Page 18: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Oral

Disadvantages cont.destruction of drugs by gastric

acid and digestive juiceseffect too slow for emergenciesunpleasant taste of some drugsunable to use in unconscious

patient

Page 19: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

First-pass Effect The first-pass effect is the term

used for the hepatic metabolism of a pharmacological agent when it is absorbed from the gut and delivered to the liver via the portal circulation. The greater the first-pass effect, the less the agent will reach the systemic circulation when the agent is administered orally

Page 20: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

First-pass Effect cont.

Magnitude of first pass hepatic effect: Extraction ratio (ER)

ER = CL liver / Q ; where Q is hepatic blood flow (usually about 90 L per hour. Systemic drug bioavailability (F) may be determined from the extent of absorption (f) and the extraction ratio (ER): F = f x (1 -ER)

Page 21: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

First-pass Effect

Page 22: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

1. unconscious patients and children 2. if patient is nauseous or vomiting 3. easy to terminate exposure 4. absorption may be variable 5. good for drugs affecting the bowel such as laxatives6. irritating drugs contraindicated

Rectal

Page 23: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Parenteral Routes

Intravascular (IV, IA)- placing a drug directly into the blood stream

Intramuscular (IM) - drug injected into skeletal muscle

Subcutaneous - Absorption of drugs from the subcutaneous tissues

Inhalation - Absorption through the lungs

Page 24: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.
Page 25: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.
Page 26: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Intravascular

Absorption phase is bypassed (100% bioavailability)1.precise, accurate and almost immediate onset of

action, 2. large quantities can be given, fairly pain free

3. greater risk of adverse effects a. high concentration attained rapidly b. risk of embolism c. OOPS factor or !@#$%

Page 27: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Intramuscular

1. very rapid absorption of drugs in aqueous solution 2.repository and slow release preparations 3.pain at injection sites for certain drugs

Page 28: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Subcutaneous

1. slow and constant absorption 2. absorption is limited by blood flow, affected if circulatory problems exist 3. concurrent administration of

vasoconstrictor will slow absorption

Page 29: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

1.gaseous and volatile agents and aerosols 2.rapid onset of action due to rapid access to circulation a.large surface area b.thin membranes separates alveoli from circulation c.high blood flowParticles larger than 20 micron and the particles impact in the mouth and throat. Smaller than 0.5 micron and they aren't retained.

Inhalation

Page 30: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Inhalation cont. Respiratory system. Except for IN, risk hypoxia. Intranasal (snorting) Snuff, cocaine may be partly oral via post-nasal

dripping. Fairly fast to brain, local damage to septum. Some of the volatile gases also appear to cross nasal membranes.

Smoke (Solids in air suspension, vapors) absorbed across lung alveoli: Nicotine, opium, THC, freebase and crack cocaine, crystal meth.Particles or vapors dissolve in lung fluids, then diffuse. Longer action than volatile gases. Tissue damage from particles, tars, CO.

Volatile gases: Some anaesthetics (nitrous oxide, ether) [precise control], petroleum distillates. Diffusion and exhalation (alcohol).

Lung-based transfer may get drug to brain in as little as five seconds.

Page 31: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Topical•Mucosal membranes (eye drops, antiseptic, sunscreen, callous removal, nasal, etc.) •Skin a. Dermal - rubbing in of oil or ointment (local action) b. Transdermal - absorption of drug through

skin (systemic action) i. stable blood levels ii. no first pass metabolism iii. drug must be potent or patch

becomes to large

Page 32: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

intravenous 30-60 seconds intraosseous 30-60 seconds endotracheal 2-3 minutes inhalation 2-3 minutes sublingual 3-5 minutes intramuscular 10-20 minutes subcutaneous 15-30 minutes rectal 5-30 minutes ingestion 30-90 minutes transdermal (topical) variable (minutes to

hours)

Route for administration -Time until effect-

Page 33: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Time-release preparations

Oral - controlled-release, timed-release, sustained-release designed to produce slow,uniform

absorption for 8 hours or longerbetter compliance, maintain effect

over night, eliminate extreme peaks and troughs

Page 34: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

Time-release preparations

Depot or reservoir preparations - parental administration (except IV), may be prolonged by using insoluble salts or suspensions in non-aqueous vehicles.

Page 35: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

The ROA is determined by the The ROA is determined by the physical characteristics of the physical characteristics of the drug, the speed which the drug is drug, the speed which the drug is absorbed and/ or released, as well absorbed and/ or released, as well as the need to bypass hepatic as the need to bypass hepatic metabolism and achieve high metabolism and achieve high conc. at particular sitesconc. at particular sites

ImportantImportantInfoInfo

Page 36: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

No No singlesingle method of drug method of drug administration is ideal for all administration is ideal for all drugs in all circumstancesdrugs in all circumstances

Very Important

Very Important

Info!Info!

Page 37: Routes of Drug Administration Routes of Drug Administration Robert L. Copeland, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology  202.806.6311.

THAT’S IT!!