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level: Lecture 8

Questions and Answers List

level questions: Lecture 8

QuestionAnswer
How is fat as reservoir?Could be a reservoir for lipid soluble drugs as it is stable and has low blood flow. Ex: thiopental presents in fat 3 hours after admin Ex: insectiscide DDT Ex: Antianxiety drug clorazepate
How is bone as a drug reservoir?Tetracyclins and heavy metals accumulate and crystallizes in bone tissue Could be toxic (lead Pb2+ poisoning) Could be therapeutic (osteoporosis bisphosphonate make hydroxyapatite crystals reducing osteoclastic function)
What is drug redistribution?Redistribution of drugs is a way of terminating the action of a drug Drugs go to another tissue than the action mediated one. Terminates effect of liposoluble drugs in heart and CNS like anesthetic thiopental which acts within seconds on brain, but then diffuses with time into muscles giving a rapid onset and termination of the anesthesia
How is the placenta drug distribution?Critical for anomalies in children, drugs transferred through placenta are liposoluble, plasma bound, and anionized (as fetal plasma is more acidic than mothers pH=7 There are efflux proteins Pgp proteins limiting fetal exposure to toxic substances, also there are influx transporters
How is CNS drug distribution?needs liposoluble drugs transport is primarily transcellular (not paracellular cause of increased tight junctions) Imp for side effects Ex: Loratidine antihistamine is non sedating as it is hydrophilic whereas diphenhydramine could cause sedation with antihistamine effect Drugs may enter CNS by specific uptake transporters into brain and CSF Also output is possible by efflux carriers (like Pgp, or OATP (also seen in GI))