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The absorption, distribution, metabolism (biotransformation), and elimination of drugs (ADME) are the processes of pharmacokinetics (Figure 2–1). Understanding and employing pharmaco-kinetic principles can increase the probability of therapeutic success and reduce the occurrence of adverse drug effects in the body.
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PHYSICOCHEMICAL FACTORS IN TRANSFER OF DRUGS ACROSS MEMBRANES
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The absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and action of a drug involve its passage across cell membranes. Mechanisms by which drugs cross membranes and the physicochemical properties of molecules and membranes that influence this transfer are critical to understanding the disposition of drugs in the human body. The characteristics of a drug that predict its movement and availability at sites of action are its molecular size and structural features, degree of ionization, relative lipid solubility of its ionized and nonionized forms, and its binding to serum and tissue proteins. Although barriers to drug movement may be a single layer of cells (e.g., intestinal epithelium) or several layers of cells and associated extracellular protein (e.g., skin), the plasma membrane represents the common barrier to drug distribution.
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The plasma membrane consists of a bilayer of amphipathic lipids with their hydrocarbon chains oriented inward to the center of the bilayer to form a continuous hydrophobic phase, with their hydrophilic heads oriented outward. Individual lipid molecules in the bilayer vary according to the particular membrane and can move laterally and organize themselves with cholesterol (e.g., sphingolipids), endowing the membrane with fluidity, flexibility, organization, high electrical resistance, and relative impermeability to highly polar molecules. Membrane proteins embedded in the bilayer serve as structural anchors, receptors, ion channels, or transporters to transduce electrical or chemical signaling pathways and provide selective targets for drug actions. Membranes are highly ordered and compartmented. Membrane proteins may be associated with caveolin and sequestered within caveolae, excluded from caveolae, or be organized in signaling domains rich in cholesterol and sphingolipid not containing caveolin or other scaffolding proteins (i.e., lipid rafts). Cell membranes are relatively permeable to water either by diffusion or by flow resulting from hydrostatic or osmotic differences across the membrane, and bulk flow of water can carry with it small drug molecules (<200 Da). Paracellular passage through intercellular gaps is sufficiently large that transfer across capillary endothelium is generally limited by blood flow (Figure 2–2). Capillaries of the central nervous system (CNS) and a variety of epithelial tissues have tight junctions. Bulk-flow transfer is limited when the molecular mass of the solute exceeds 100-200 Da. Accordingly, most large lipophilic drugs must pass through the cell membrane itself (see Figure 2–2) by passive and active ...