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Chapter 3

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

Chapter 3

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

Drug Administration and Therapy Phases: Overview
Drugs are chemicals used for diagnosing, treating, or preventing diseases. The four phases of drug product preparation are pharmaceutic, pharmacokinetic, …
Drug Absorption: Overview
The process of drug absorption involves the passage of a drug from its administration site into the plasma. It is influenced by factors like …
Drug Delivery: Overview
The choice of a drug's delivery route depends on its physicochemical features, such as lipid or water solubility and ionization, as well as …
Drug Delivery: Enteral Route
Enteral administration of drugs can occur via oral, sublingual, and buccal routes. Oral administration involves swallowing a pill; in sublingual delivery, …
Drug Delivery: Parenteral Route
The parenteral route delivers drugs directly into the systemic circulation. It facilitates rapid onset of action and is the preferred route for poorly …
Drug Delivery: Miscellaneous Routes
Drug delivery methods, such as oral inhalation, nasal sprays, transdermal patches, eye drops, intravitreal, and intrathecal injections, mostly offer …
Cellular Membranes and Drug Transport
Drugs encounter multiple barriers to reach their target site within the body, including the multiple-cell layered skin, single-layered intestinal …
Mechanisms of Drug Absorption: Paracellular, Transcellular, and Vesicular Transport
After administration, drugs must cross cell membranes to reach their target site in the body. For example, oral drugs must navigate intestinal epithelial …
Passive Diffusion: Overview and Kinetics
Passive diffusion allows small lipophilic drugs to cross the cell membranes along a concentration gradient. During this process, the drug absorption rate …
Pore Transport and Ion-Pair Transport
Most drugs cross the membrane barriers through passive transport mechanisms, moving along the concentration gradient. Many low molecular weight drugs move …
Carrier-Mediated Transport
Carrier-mediated transport facilitates the movement of lipid-insoluble drugs via membrane-spanning transporters. As drug concentration increases during …
Facilitated Diffusion
The plasma membrane consists of several transporters or carrier proteins interspersed between the lipid bilayer that facilitate solute transport. …
Active Transport
Active transport is the process of moving lipid-insoluble molecules against their concentration gradient using energy and specialized transporters. There …
Vesicular Trasport: Endocytosis, Transcytosis and Exocytosis
Endocytosis is a process where the cell membrane folds inward as vesicles to engulf large-sized drugs. This process includes pinocytosis and …
Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Anatomical Parameters
Drug absorption entails transporting drugs from the administration site to the bloodstream. GI motility moves drugs through the digestive tract, entering …
Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Disease States and Pharmacology
Various disease conditions can influence the body's blood flow and the functioning of the gastrointestinal system, influencing the drug absorption …
Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Physicochemical Parameters
The physicochemical properties of drugs are essential parameters for designing stable and bioavailable drug products. A drug's solubility depends on …
Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Pharmaceutical Parameters
For drug products like tablets and capsules, dissolution and absorption are greatly influenced by the manufacturing methods and inactive components or …
Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Drug Dissolution
The drug absorption process from solid oral dosage forms, like tablets or capsules, into the systemic circulation involves sequential events. Firstly, …
Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Presystemic Elimination
Most oral drugs are absorbed from the intestines into the hepatic portal vein, passing through the liver before entering the systemic circulation. This …
Theories of Dissolution: Diffusion Layer Model
Dissolution, the process of drug particles dissolving in a solvent, is explained by the diffusion layer model. According to this model, initially, a thin …
Theories of Dissolution: The Danckwerts’ Model and Interfacial Barrier Model
Various dissolution theories elucidate factors impacting the dissolution rate. Danckwert's model postulates that the dissolution medium shows …
Factors Affecting Dissolution: Particle Size and Effective Surface Area
Recall the Noyes-Whitney equation, which suggests a direct correlation between dissolution rate and a drug's surface area. A solid drug's surface …
Factors Affecting Dissolution: Polymorphism, Amorphism and Pseudopolymorphism
Drug dissolution is influenced by polymorphism, which refers to the existence of a drug substance in multiple crystalline forms like polymorphs, solvates, …
Factors Affecting Dissolution: Drug pKa, Lipophilicity and GI pH
Drug absorption in the gastrointestinal tract depends mainly on the absorption site's pH, the drug's dissociation constant, and lipophilicity. The …
Factors Affecting Dissolution: Drug Permeability, Stability and Stereochemistry
Most orally administered drugs travel through the GI tract and diffuse passively through intestinal membranes to enter the systemic circulation. The …
Methods for Studying Drug Absorption: In vitro
Various in vitro methods utilize different biological barriers to study drug absorption. In the diffusion cell technique, a donor compartment with the …
Methods for Studying Drug Absorption: In situ
In situ drug absorption methods mimic in vivo conditions by perfusing a drug solution through an anesthetized rat's intestinal segment. It includes …
Non-Oral Extravascular Drug Absorption Routes
Non-oral extravascular routes mainly diffuse drugs passively to reach the systemic circulation. Factors influencing extravascular drug absorption include …
A Clinical Trial Assessing the Safety, Efficacy, and Delivery of Olive-Oil-Based Three-Chamber Bags for Parenteral Nutrition
Limited evidence exists to precisely estimate efficacy and safety differences between parenteral nutrition (PN) prepared using olive-oil-based …
An In Vitro Dissolution Determination of Multi-Index Components in Tibetan Medicine Rhodiola Granules
The composition of the Tibetan medicine Rhodiola granules (RG) is complex, and the overall quality of RG is difficult to determine. Therefore, …
Comparative Study of Basement-Membrane Matrices for Human Stem Cell Maintenance and Intestinal Organoid Generation
Extracellular matrix (ECM) plays a critical role in cell behavior and development. Organoids generated from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) …