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Topic 5: Intestinal Absorption

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Food Binding. Binding with Mg and Ca in the dairy products. ... and common cause of drug-drug, drug-nutrient, and drug-herbs interactions. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Topic 5: Intestinal Absorption


1
Topic 5 Intestinal Absorption
  • Physiology of Huge Absorption Area
  • Absorption versus elimination via first-pass
    metabolism and excretion
  • Food effects on intestinal motility and
    absorption

2
Structure of Intestine
  • Super Structure With Villi and Microvilli.
  • Large Absorption Area
  • Availability of All Transport Pathways

3
Intestinal Epithelium
4
Intestinal Epithelium
5
Intestinal Epithelium
6
Intestinal Epithelium
7
Intestinal Epithelium
8
Intestinal Epithelium
9
Schematic Epithelium
10
Function of the Intestine
  • Absorption
  • Excretion
  • Immune Functions

11
Absorption Have we got a plan?
Proteins
pepsin
Proteins/polypeptides
Trypsin
Oligopeptides/amino acids
Peptidases
di/-/tripeptides/amino acids
Absorption
12
Secretion into the Intestine
  • Multiple glands
  • Intestinal and other organs
  • Large quantity (1 L/day)
  • Intake of fat and protein enhance secretion
  • Xenobiotics secretion via ABC transporters

13
Pattern of Intestinal Motility
  • Different segment of the intestine is always in
    different phases (segmented motility pattern).
  • When phase I starts at the duodenum, phase IV
    ends at the terminal ileum.
  • Contraction is not as strong as the stomach, but
    it may be the continuation of stomach
    contraction.

14
Intestinal Transit
15
Effect of Food on Drug Absorption
  • Gastric Emptying
  • GI Secretion
  • pH
  • Blood Flow
  • Food Binding

16
Gastric Emptying
  • Enteric Coated Dosage Forms
  • Drug with absorption Windows
  • Riboflavin Limited absorption in upper small
    intestine.

17
GI Secretion
  • Food increases bile secretion.
  • Griseofulvin low dissolution rate
  • Isotretinoin low dissolution rate

18
Blood Flow
  • Propranolol bioavailability increases 30 when
    taken with food.
  • 500 ml/min hepatic blood flow
  • 670 ml/min hepatic blood flow

19
Food Binding
  • Binding with Mg and Ca in the dairy products.
  • Binding with protein when drug molecules have SH
    group.
  • Protein R-SH gt Protein-S-R

20
Dissolution Rate
  • Measures the speed of dissolution, not just the
    equilibrium solubility
  • V K S Cs or V K S (Cs-C)
  • Cs Cs(1Ka/H) Acid
  • Cs Cs(1H/ Ka) Base

21
Topic 6 Dissolution Rate and Absorption
  • Dissolution Rate
  • Enhancing Dissolution Rate
  • Decreasing Dissolution Rate

22
Dissolution Rate
  • Determine how fast drug is dissolved in GI fluid.
  • Is affected by
  • Chemical form
  • Crystal form
  • Wetability
  • Surface area

23
The Balancing Act
  • Permeability
  • Solubility/Dissolution Rate
  • Stability Chemical/Biological (First-pass
    metabolism)
  • Activity

24
GI Diseases and Malabsorption
  • Alcoholism
  • Intestinal Infection
  • Chemotherapy
  • AIDS
  • Inherited Disease
  • Coeliac Gluten Intolerance
  • Crohns Disease Inflammatory
  • Hartcup Disease Impaired AA Absorption

25
Topic 7 Intestinal Metabolism and Excretion
  • Type and Variety of Enzymes
  • Distribution Patterns of Enzymes
  • Types and Variety of Excretion Pathways
  • Distribution Patterns of Excretion Pathways
  • Kinetic Consequence of Metabolism and Excretion

26
Type of Enzymes
  • Phase I Enzymes
  • Hydrolytic enzymes
  • Oxidative enzymes
  • Phase II Enzymes
  • Conjugation

27
Type of Enzymes
  • Drugs Enzymes Remarks
  • Acetylaminophen Sulfotransferase NSAID
  • Aspirin Esterases NSAID
  • Alcohol Alcohol dehydrogenase Potential Abuse
  • Clofibrate Esterases Hyperlipidemia (Type
    III)
  • Cyclosporin P4503A Immunosuppressant
  • Despiramine N-sulfotransferase Antidepressant
  • Ethyinylestradiol P450 Female hormone
  • Flurazepam P450 Sedative/Hypnotics
  • Isoniazid Acetyltransferase Anti-TB
  • Morphine Glucuronosyltransferase Analgesics/dru
    g abuse
  • Sulphonamides Acetyltransferase Antibiotic
  • Testesterone Glucuronosyltransferase Male
    hormone

28
Distribution Pattern of Enzymes
  • Region-dependent
  • Differentiation-dependent
  • Diet-dependent

29
Effect of Metabolism
  • Metabolism may decrease amount of drug available
    for absorption.
  • Metabolism may decrease amount of drug available
    for the systemic delivery.
  • Metabolism may be the basis of drug-drug,
    drug-(diet or herbal) supplement interactions.
  • Metabolism may be the basis for nonlinear
    behavior in bioavailability.

30
Types of Excretion
  • ABC transporters or ATP-binding cassette
    transporters.
  • Specific ion transporters.

31
Effects of Excretion
  • Excretion may decrease amount of drug absorbed
    into the cells.
  • Excretion may be the basis of drug-drug,
    drug-(diet or herbal) supplement interactions.
  • Excretion may be the basis for nonlinear behavior
    in bioavailability.

32
Differences Between Metabolism and Excretion
  • Chemical vs. Physical Change
  • Detoxification vs. Protection
  • They can work together to prevent the entry of
    certain xenobiotics into our cells and into our
    body.

33
Combined Elimination Mechanism
34
Kinetic Effect of Metabolism and Excretion
  • In the absence of drug interaction
  • V Jmax C /(KmC) for efflux
  • V Vmax C/(KmC) for metabolism
  • In the presence of drug interaction
  • V Jmax C /(KmC) for efflux
  • V Vmax C/(KmC) for metabolism
  • where KmKm(1Ci/Ki), Ci is the concentration of
    inhibitor, and Ki is the inhibition constant.

35
Topic 8 Biopharmaceutical Interactions
  • Physical Liquid, small versus large particles
  • Chemical Covalent binding of food components,
    stability of drug molecules in strong acids
  • Physiological Constraint of residence or
    transit time
  • Biochemical Competition for transporters and
    metabolic enzymes

36
Review
  • Four Basic Concepts
  • Solubility
  • Permeability
  • Stability Metabolic Stability
  • Residence Time

37
Solubility
  • Is a necessary step for drug absorption.
  • Ionized vs. Unionized
  • Ionized more soluble in water
  • For acids, at same pH lower pKa, more soluble
  • For acids, at same pKa, higher pH, more soluble
  • Unionized, higher partition coefficient, which is
    a representation of lipid solubility.

38
Dissolution Rate
  • Dependent on apparent solubility
  • Size of particle or the surface area
  • Chemical form and crystal structures
  • Enhanced in the presence of surfactants and other
    wetting agents.

39
Carrier-Mediated Permeability
  • Calculation V JmaxxC/(KmC)xS
  • Rate of absorption is only proportional to Jmax
    and S, but not C or Km.
  • In the presence of antiabsorption mechanisms such
    as p-glycoprotein and first-pass metabolism,
    effective carrier-mediated absorption decreases.
    Inhibition of these antiabsorption processes will
    enhance absorption of passively permeable drugs,
    which can lead to increased bioavailability.
    However, situation may be complicated by the fact
    that some of the measures used to inhibit or
    saturate the antiabsorption mechanisms, such as
    escalation of dose, will lead to saturation of
    the carrier, leading to a decrease in
    bioavailability.

40
Metabolic Stability
  • First-pass metabolism is an antiabsorption
    mechanism that decrease the bioavailability of
    the drugs.
  • First-pass metabolism is a saturable process.
  • Kinetically, it behaves just like a
    p-glycoprotein mediated elimination.

41
Metabolic Stability
  • Inhibition of metabolism is a leading and common
    cause of drug-drug, drug-nutrient, and drug-herbs
    interactions.
  • Some molecules (e.g., protein and polypeptides)
    are not delivered through the oral route because
    of their poor stability in the GI tract prior to
    and after oral absorption.

42
Residence Time
  • Controls the onset of drug based on dosage form
    design and diet.
  • Controls the minimum frequency of dosage
    administration.

43
Key to Exam
  • Selection of appropriate equations
  • Use of logic and proportion
  • efficiency
  • accuracy
  • Unit conversion
  • Result interpretation
  • Poise and time management

44
End of Oral Drug Delivery
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