General pharm – Drug metabolism/elimination

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HY points about each drug followed by a quiz at the end

Drug metabolism

  • Phase I & Phase II types of metabolism
  • 1 Old HOR, 2 MAGS (“One old whore, two mags.”) <– Weird-as-fuck mnemonic I created, but it literally does help.

Phase I

  • Cytochrome P-450-dependent.
  • Geriatrics (Old people) lose phase I ability.
  • Hydroxylation, Oxidation, Reduction reactions.

Phase II

  • Not P-450-dependent
  • Methylation, Acetylation, Glucuronidation, Sulfation
  • People who are slow-acetylators (slower Phase II acetylation rate compared to most individuals) can have ↑ side-effects from drugs such as isoniazid because of ↓ rate of metabolism.

Drug elimination

Zero-order elimination

  • Same amount of drug eliminated per unit time, regardless of dose (e.g., 2mg/hr eliminated always).
  • Graph of serum drug concentration (Cp) vs time is a straight line.
  • Capacity-limited elimination (i.e., the liver/kidney are saturated/maxed out on how much they can eliminate).
  • PEA –> Phenytoin, Ethanol, Aspirin.

First-order elimination

  • Same fraction of drug eliminated per unit time (e.g., 20% of drug eliminated per hour always).
  • Graph of serum drug concentration (Cp) vs time is a curved line.
  • Flow-limited elimination (i.e., the liver/kidney aren’t saturated/maxed out on how much they can eliminate; the drug is the rate-limiting factor).

Drug elimination in relation to urine pH

  • Key concept is: ionic species (i.e., -NH3+/-COO) are poorly reabsorbed; neutral species (i.e., -NH2/-COOH) are readily reabsorbed.
  • If a species is a weak acid (i.e., has a -COOH group, where -COOH ↔ -COO):
    • ↓pH favors -COOH
    • ↑pH favors -COO
    • Salicylates (aspirin) are HY example, where Tx for overdose is sodium bicarbonate –> increases pH of urine –> traps aspirin as -COO form in the urine –> decreased reabsorption. USMLE will ask why sodium bicarb is the Tx for aspirin toxicity; answer = “increased excretion through urinary alkalinization.”
  • If a species is a weak base (i.e., has an -NH2 group, where -NH3+ ↔ -NH2):
    • ↓pH favors -NH3+
    • ↑pH favors -NH2
    • Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and barbiturates are HY examples.
    • Tx for TCA toxicity is sodium bicarbonate, which paradoxically decreases urinary excretion. Student says, “Wait, well then why the fuck does that make any sense then?” –> It’s because the sodium bicarb functions to induce dissociation of the TCA from myocardial sodium channels to decrease risk of arrhythmia; the purpose isn’t to increase urinary excretion. In other words:

42M + consumes bottle of aspirin in suicide attempt; sodium bicarb is administered; what’s the mechanism via which this helps? –> answer = increased excretion through urinary alkalinization.

In contrast,

42M + consumes his TCA medication in suicide attempt; sodium bicarb is administered; what’s the mechanism via which this helps? –> answer = “increased dissociation from myocardial sodium channels.” The wrong answer is “increased excretion through urinary alkalinization,” which refers instead to salicylates.

1. Which of the following best describe(s) phase I metabolism? (select all that apply)

 
 
 

2. Which of the following best describe(s) phase II metabolism? (select all that apply)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

3. Name three agents that are metabolized zero-order.

4. Two patients of the same height, weight, and % body fat are administered the same dose of a drug, however they have very different serum concentrations. In terms of of phase I vs II metabolism. What could explain this difference?

5. A patient is administered a drug that demonstrates zero-order kinetics. A serum concentration of 8 units/L is reached. After one hour, the serum concentration is 6 units/L. What will the serum concentration be after 2 hours (i.e., after one more hour)?

 
 

6. A drug that demonstrates first-order kinetics is measured at a serum concentration of 10 units/L. An hour later, the serum concentration is 9 units/L. What will be the serum concentration be an hour from now (i.e., after two hours total)?

7. A patient has a peak serum aspirin concentration of 15 units/L. After one hour, the serum concentration is 10 units/L. What’s the serum concentration after two hours (i.e., after one more hour)?

 
 

8. a) Tx for aspirin toxicity?

b) Tx for TCA toxicity?

c) Mechanism for both?

9. What effect would alkalinizing the urine have on an acidic compound’s serum levels?