Amien GPP 1 Med-1
Amien GPP 1 Med-1
Amien GPP 1 Med-1
pharmacological
principles
Outline
Definition
Basic terms
Nomenclature
Sources of drugs
Dosage forms
Routes of administration
Drug invention and pharmaceutical industry
INTRODUCTION
Pharmacology
Is the science of drugs
(Greek: Pharmacon--drug; logos-discourse in).
In a broad sense:
It deals with interaction of exogenously
administered chemical molecules (drugs) with
living systems.
Two types of interactions
The two main divisions of pharmacology are
pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics.
pharmacology
pharmacodynamics pharmacokinetics
Pharmacodynamics (Greek: dynamics-power)
* What the drug does to the body.
This includes:
Physiological and biochemical effects of drugs
Their mechanism of action at organ system/
subcellular / macromolecular levels
e.g.- Adrenaline interaction with
adrenoceptors G-protein mediated
stimulation of cell membrane bound adenylyl
cyclase increased intracellular cyclic 3',5'
AMP cardiac stimulation, hepatic
glycogenolysis and hyperglycaemia, etc.
Pharmacokinetics (Greek: Kinesis-movement)
* What the body does to the drug. How the body affects the drug with time
This refers to
movement of the drug in the body and
alteration of the drug by the body;
includes absorption, distribution, biotransformation and
excretion of the drug,
e.g. paracetamol
rapidly and almost completely absorbed orally attaining peak
blood levels at 30-60 min;
25% bound to plasma proteins,
widely and almost uniformly distributed in the body (volume of
distribution - 1L/kg);
Extensively metabolized in the liver,
Metabolites are excreted in urine;
has a plasma half life (t1/2) of 2-3 hours and
a clearance (CL) value of 5 ml/kg/min.
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Study of the mechanisms by which drugs act
to produce biochemical or physiological
changes in the body
Chemotherapy
Side effect
Pharmacotherapeutics
efficacy
Indication
Drug (French: Drogue-a dry herb)
The single active chemical entity in a medicine
More comprehensive definition:
"Drug is any substance or product used to modify or
explore physiological systems or pathological
states for the benefit of the recipient."
Pharmacotherapeutics
The application of pharmacological
information together with knowledge of the
disease for its prevention, mitigation or cure.
Selection of the most appropriate drug, dose
and duration of treatment taking into account
the specific features of a patient are parts of
pharmacotherapeutics.
Clinical pharmacology
It is the scientific study of drugs in man.
It includes PD & PK investigations in healthy
volunteers and in patients
Chemotherapy
It is the treatment of systemic infection/malignancy with
specific drugs that have selective toxicity for the
infecting organism/ malignant cell with no/minimal
effects on the host cells.
Drug B relative to A?
Drug C relative to A?
Drug C relative to B?
Drug D versus the
other 3 interms of
Potency
Efficacy
1. Essential drugs (medicines)
2. Orphan drugs
Essential drugs: those that satisfy the priority healthcare
needs of the population
Orphan Drugs: These are drugs or biological products for
diagnosis/treatment/prevention of a rare disease or
condition, or a more common disease (endemic only in
resource poor countries) for which there is no reasonable
expectation that the cost of developing and marketing it
will be recovered from the sales of that drug
Basic pharmacological terms
Chemotherapy
Side effect
Pharmacotherapeutics
efficacy
Indication
DRUG NOMENCLATURE
A drug generally has three categories of names:
(a) Chemical name
It describes the substance chemically,
e.g. 1-(lsopropylamino)-3-(1-naphthyloxy) propan-2-ol for
propranolol.
This is cumbersome
Not suitable for use in prescribing
A code name, e.g. RO 15-1788 (later named
flumazenil) may be assigned by the manufacturer for
convenience and simplicity before an approved name
is coined.
(b) Non-proprietary name/generic name
It is the name accepted by a competent
scientific body/authority,
e.g. the United States Adopted Name (USAN) by
the USAN council.
Similarly, there is the British Approved name
(BAN) of a drug.
The nonproprietary names of newer drugs are
kept uniform by an agreement to use the rINN
in all member countries of the WHO
E.g. omeprazole,
(c) Proprietary (Brand) name
It is the name assigned by the manufacturer(s)
It is property or trade mark.
One drug may have multiple proprietary names, e.g.
ALTOL, ATCARDIL, ATECOR, ATEN, BETACARD, LONOL,
TENOLOL, TENORMIN for atenolol from different
manufacturers.
Brand names are designed to be
catchy, short, easy to remember and often suggestive, e.g.
LOPRESOR suggesting drug for lowering blood pressure.
Prescribing?
Arguments
Generic name Brand name
Convenience,
However, when it is
Economy and important to ensure
Better comprehension consistency of the product
(propranolol, sotalol, timolol, in terms of quality and
pindolol, metoprolol, bioavailability, etc. and
acebutolol, atenolol are all
blockers, but their brand especially when official
names have no such control over quality of
similarity). manufactured products is
not rigorous, it is better to
prescribe by the
dependable brand name.
SOURCES OF DRUGS
1. Minerals: Magnesium sulphate, Magnesium trisilcate, etc.
2. Animals: Insuline, thyroid extract, heparine etc.
3. Plants: Morphine, digoxine, atropine etc.
4. Synthetic sources: Asprine, sulphonamides, paracetamol etc.
5. Micro organisms: Penicilline, streptomycine etc.
6. Genetic engineering: Human insuline, human growth
hormone etc.
Out of all the above sources, majority of the drugs currently
used in therapeutics are from synthetic sources.
Dossage Forms
Tablets - Active subs + expients and fillers (make it easy to handle
& swallow)
Capsules - Powder or granule in gelatin case
Liq DFs
Solution - solute dissolved in solvent (homogenous)
Suspension - solute particles suspended in solvent
Emulsion - insoluble liquid particles are dispersed in a solvent
Aerosols - suspensions of fine, solid or liquid particles in a gas.
They are used to apply drugs to the respiratory tract
Suppositories - conical or ovoid, solid preparations for insertion in
to the rectum or vagina. Vaginal suppositories often are called
pessaries.
ROUTES OF DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Local routes Systemic routes
Topical Oral
Deeper tissues Sublingual/buccal
Rectal
Cutaneous/transdermal
Inhalation
Nasal
Parenteral
SC
IM
IV
Transdermal patch
Portal vein
suppository
SYSTEMIC ROUTES
1. Oral
Oral ingestion is:
the oldest and
commonest mode of drug administration.
It is
safer,
more convenient,
does not need assistance,
often painless,
the medicament need not be sterile and so is
cheaper.
Limitations of oral route
Action of drugs is slower and thus not suitable for
emergencies.
Unpalatable drugs (chloramphenicol) are difficult to
administer; drug may be filled in capsules to circumvent this.
May cause nausea and vomiting (emetine).
Cannot be used for uncooperative/unconscious/vomiting
patient.
Absorption of drugs may be variable and erratic; certain drugs
are not absorbed (streptomycin).
Others are destroyed by digestive juices (penicillin G, insulin)
or in liver (GTN, testosterone, lidocaine).
SYSTEMIC ROUTES