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DISPOSITION OF CHEMICALS

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Title: DISPOSITION OF CHEMICALS


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DISPOSITION OF CHEMICALS
The disposition of chemicals entering the body
(from C.D. Klaassen, Casarett and Doulls
Toxicology, 5th ed., New York McGraw-Hill, 1996).
3
Plasma concentration vs. time profile of a single
dose of a chemical ingested orally
Plasma Concentration
Time
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LOCUS OF ACTION RECEPTORS
TISSUE RESERVOIRS
Bound
Free
Free
Bound
ABSORPTION
EXCRETION
Free Drug
SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION
Bound Drug
BIOTRANSFORMATION
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Transfer of Chemicals across Membranes
  • Passive transport determined by
  • - Permeability of surface
  • - Concentration gradient
  • - Surface area
  • Permeability depends on
  • For cell membranes
  • - Lipid solubility
  • - pH of medium
  • - pK of chemical
  • For endothelium
  • size, shape and charge of chemical

PASSAGE ACROSS MEMBRANES
Active
Passive
Facilitated
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Factors Affecting Absorption (G.I., lungs, skin)
  • Determinants of Passive Transfer (lipid
    solubility, pH, pK, area, concentration
    gradient).
  • Blood flow to site.
  • Dissolution in the acqueous medium surrounding
    the absorbing surface.

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Factors Affecting Absorption from the GI Tract
  • Disintegration of dosage form and dissolution of
    particles
  • Chemical stability of chemical in gastric and
    intestinal juices and enzymes
  • Motility and mixing in GI tract
  • Presence and type of food
  • Rate of gastric emptying
  • Intestinal vs. gastric absorption
  • FIRST PASS EFFECT

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Absorption from the Lungs
  • For gases, vapors and volatile liquids, aerosols
    and particles
  • In general large surface area, thin barrier,
    high blood flow rapid absorption
  • Bloodair partition coefficient
  • influence of respiratory rate and blood flow
  • Bloodtissue partition coefficient

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Absorption from the Lungs
REMOVAL OF PARTICLES
Absorption of Aerosols and Particles 1-
Particle Size 2- Water solubility of the
chemical present in the aerosol or particle
Lymph
Physical
Phagocytosis
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DEPOSITION OF PARTICLES IN THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
NasopharyngealRegion 5-30 µm
Trachea Bronchi Bronchioles 1-5 µm
Alveolar Region 1 µm
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Absorption from the Skin
  • Must cross several cell layers (stratum corneum,
    epidermis, dermis) to reach blood vessels.
  • Factors important here are
  • lipid solubility
  • hydration of skin
  • site (e.g. sole of feet vs. scrotum)

14
Other Routes of Exposure
  • Intraperitoneal
  • large surface area, vascularized, first pass
    effect.
  • Intramuscular, subcutaneous, intradermal
    absorption through endothelial pores into the
    circulation blood flow is most important other
    factors
  • Intravenous

15
Bioavailability
Definition the fraction of the administered
dose reaching the systemic circulation for
i.v. 100 for non i.v. ranges from 0 to
100 e.g. lidocaine bioavailability 35 due to
destruction in gastric acid and liver
metabolism First Pass Effect
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Bioavailability
Destroyed in gut
Not absorbed
Destroyed by gut wall
Destroyed by liver
Dose
to systemic circulation
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Bioavailability
Plasma concentration
(AUC)o (AUC)iv
i.v. route
oral route
Time (hours)
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Principle
For chemicals taken by routes other than the
i.v. route, the extent of absorption and the
bioavailability must be understood in order to
determine whether a certain exposure dose will
induce toxic effects or not. It will also
explain why the same dose may cause toxicity by
one route but not the other.
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Distribution into body compartments
  • Plasma 3.5 liters. (heparin, plasma expanders)
  • Extracellular fluid 14 liters.
  • (tubocurarine, charged polar compounds)
  • Total body water 40 liters. (ethanol)
  • Transcellular small. CSF, eye, fetus (must
    pass tight junctions)

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Distribution
  • Rapid process relative to absorption and
    elimination
  • Extent depends on - blood flow - size,
    M.W. of molecule - lipid solubility and
    ionization - plasma protein binding - tissue
    binding

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Distribution
  • Initial and later phases
  • initial determined by blood flow
  • later determined by tissue affinity
  • Examples of tissues that store chemicals
  • fat for highly lipid soluble compounds
  • bone for lead

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Distribution
  • Blood Brain Barrier characteristics
  • 1. No pores in endothelial membrane
  • 2. Transporter in endothelial cells
  • 3. Glial cells surround endothelial cells
  • 4. Less protein concentration in interstitial
    fluid
  • Passage across Placenta

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Alter plasma binding of chemicals
1000 molecules
90.0
99.9
bound
100
1
molecules free
100-fold increase in free pharmacologically
active concentration at site of
action. NON-TOXIC
TOXIC
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PRINCIPLE
Chemicals appear to distribute in the body as if
it were a single compartment. The magnitude of
the chemicals distribution is given by the
apparent volume of distribution (Vd).
Amount of drug in body
Vd
Concentration in Plasma
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Volume of Distribution
Volume into which a drug appears to
distribute with a concentration equal to its
plasma concentration
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Examples of apparent Vds for some drugs
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Elimination by the Kidney
  • Excretion - major 1) glomerular filtration
  • glomerular structure, size constraints,
    protein binding
  • 2) tubular reabsorption/secretion
  • - acidification/alkalinization,
  • - active transport, competitive/saturable,
    organic acids/bases -protein binding
  • Metabolism - minor

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Nephron Structure
The structure of the nephron (from A.C. Guyton,
Textbook of Medical Physiology, Philadelphia,
W.B. Saunders Co. 1991
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Elimination by the Liver
  • Metabolism - major
  • 1) Phase I and II reactions 2) Function
    change a lipid soluble to more water soluble
    molecule to excrete in kidney
  • 3) Possibility of active metabolites with same
    or different properties as parent molecule
  • Biliary Secretion active transport, 4 categories

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The enterohepatic shunt
Drug
Liver
Bile formation
Bile
duct
Biotransformation glucuronide produced
Hydrolysis by beta glucuronidase
gall bladder
Portal circulation
Gut
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EXCRETION BY OTHER ROUTES
  • LUNG - For gases and volatile liquids by
    diffusion.
  • Excretion rate depends on partial pressure of
    gas and bloodair partition coefficient.
  • MOTHERS MILK
  • a) By simple diffusion mostly. Milk has high
    lipid content and is more acidic than plasma
    (traps alkaline fat soluble substances).
  • b) Important for 2 reasons transfer to baby,
    transfer from animals to humans.
  • OTHER SECRETIONS sweat, saliva, etc..
  • minor contribution

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CLINICAL TOXICOKINETICS
  • Quantitative Aspects of Toxicokinetics

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Influence of Variations in Relative Rates of
Absorption and Elimination on Plasma
Concentration of an Orally Administered Chemical
Plasma concentration
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Elimination
  • Zero order constant rate of elimination
    irrespective of plasma concentration.
  • First order rate of elimination proportional to
    plasma concentration. Constant Fraction of drug
    eliminated per unit time.
  • Rate of elimination constant (CL) x Conc.

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Zero Order Elimination Pharmacokinetics of Ethanol
  • Mild intoxication at 1 mg/ml in plasma
  • How much should be taken in to reach it?
  • 42 g or 56 ml of pure ethanol (Vd x Conc.)
  • Or 120 ml of a strong alcoholic drink like
    whiskey
  • Ethanol has a constant rate of elimination of
  • 10 ml/hour
  • To maintain mild intoxication, at what rate must
    ethanol be taken now?
  • at 10 ml/h of pure ethanol, or 20 ml/h of drink.

DRUNKENNESS
RARELY DONE
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First Order Elimination
dC/dt k
-Kel.t
Ct Co e
lnCt lnCo Kel .t
logCt logCo - Kel . t
2.303
Plasma concentration
y b a.x
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10000
Zero Order Elimination
1000
Plasma Concentration
100
10
1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Time
logCt logCo - Kel . t
2.303
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Plasma Concentration Profile after a Single I.V.
Injection
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lnCt lnCo Kel.t
Vd Dose/C0
When t 0, C C0, i.e., the concentration at
time zero when distribution is complete and
elimination has not started yet. Use this value
and the dose to calculate Vd.
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lnCt lnCo Kel.t
t1/2 0.693/Kel
When Ct ½ C0, then Kel.t 0.693. This is the
time for the plasma concentration to reach half
the original, i.e., the half-life of elimination.

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Principle
  • Elimination of chemicals from the body usually
    follows first order kinetics with a
    characteristic half-life (t1/2) and fractional
    rate constant (Kel).

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First Order Elimination
  • Clearance volume of plasma cleared of chemical
    per unit time.
  • Clearance Rate of elimination/plasma conc.
  • Half-life of elimination time for plasma conc.
    to decrease by half.
  • Useful in estimating - time to reach
    steady state concentration. - time for plasma
    conc. to fall after exposure stopped.

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Rate of elimination Kel x Amount in body Rate
of elimination CL x Plasma Concentration
Therefore, Kel x Amount CL x
Concentration Kel CL/Vd 0.693/t1/2 CL/Vd

t1/2 0.693 x Vd/CL
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Principle
  • The half-life of elimination of a chemical (and
  • its residence in the body) depends on its
  • clearance and its volume of distribution
  • t1/2 is proportional to Vd
  • t1/2 is inversely proportional to CL

t1/2 0.693 x Vd/CL
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Multiple dosing
  • On continuous steady administration of a
    chemical, plasma concentration will rise fast at
    first then more slowly and reach a plateau,
    where
  • rate of administration rate of elimination
    ie. steady state is reached.
  • Therefore, at steady state
  • Dose (Rate of Administration) clearance x
    plasma conc.
  • or
  • steady state conc. Dose/clearance

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Single dose
Toxic level
Cumulation
plasma conc
Time
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The time to reach steady state is 4 t1/2s
Concentration due to repeated doses
Concentration due to a single dose
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Pharmacokinetic parameters
  • Vol of distribution V DOSE / Co
  • Plasma clearance Cl Kel .Vd
  • plasma half-life (t1/2) t1/2 0.693 / Kel or
    directly from graph
  • Bioavailability (AUC)x / (AUC)iv

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dX/dt CL x Conc.
dX CL x Conc. x dt
But Conc. x dt small area under the curve. For
total amount eliminated (which is total given or
the dose if i.v.), add all the small areas AUC.
Dose CL x AUC and Dose x F CL x AUC
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(AUC)o (AUC)iv
Bioavailability

i.v. route
oral route
Plasma concentration
Time (hours)
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Variability in Pharmacokinetics
60
50
40
Concentration (mg/L)
Plasma Drug
30
20
10
0
0
5
10
15
Daily Dose (mg/kg)
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PRINCIPLE
  • The absorption, distribution and elimination of
    a chemical are qualitatively similar in all
    individuals. However, for several reasons, the
    quantitative aspects may differ considerably.
    Each person must be considered individually and
    treated accordingly.

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THE DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIP
The dose-response relationship (from C.D.
Klaassen, Casarett and Doulls Toxicology, 5th
ed., New York McGraw-Hill, 1996).
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