JoVE Logo

サインイン

8.6 : Drug Distribution as One-Compartment Model and Elimination by Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Overview

Drug administration can occur through various routes, each of which may result in a different process of elimination. This process is often mixed with nonlinear and linear processes. It's important to understand that a single drug can be metabolized into different metabolites through parallel processes.

For instance, consider the metabolism of sodium salicylate. This compound is metabolized into two distinct substances: a glucuronide and a glycine conjugate. The rate of conjugation depends on the available glycine.

Another example is the pharmacokinetic profile of niacin, which is complex due to extensive first-pass metabolism that is dosing-rate specific. Niacin undergoes metabolism through a conjugation step with glycine to form nicotinuric acid and another pathway that forms nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. Furthermore, niacin is metabolized to at least N-methylnicotinamide and nicotinamide-N-oxide, which are further metabolized to two other compounds. This explains the nonlinear relationship between niacin dose and plasma drug concentrations following multiple doses of niacin extended-release tablets.

In cases where a drug is administered through a constant intravenous infusion and eliminated through nonlinear pharmacokinetics, it follows zero-order input. On the other hand, orally administered drugs are absorbed through first-order absorption and eliminated through nonlinear pharmacokinetics. These processes can be determined by different equations.

Understanding these processes is crucial in pharmacology, as it helps predict how different drugs will behave in the body, influencing dosing strategies and potential drug interactions.

タグ

Drug DistributionOne compartment ModelNonlinear PharmacokineticsDrug AdministrationMetabolismSodium SalicylateGlucuronideGlycine ConjugateNiacin PharmacokineticsFirst pass MetabolismDosing rate SpecificNicotinuric AcidNicotinamide Adenine DinucleotideZero order InputFirst order AbsorptionDrug Interactions

章から 8:

article

Now Playing

8.6 : Drug Distribution as One-Compartment Model and Elimination by Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Overview

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

35 閲覧数

article

8.1 : Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Overview

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

235 閲覧数

article

8.2 : Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Causes of Nonlinearity

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

103 閲覧数

article

8.3 : Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Michaelis-Menten Equation

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

184 閲覧数

article

8.4 : Determination of Michaelis Constant and Maximum Elimination Rate

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

54 閲覧数

article

8.5 : Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Drug Elimination for IV Bolus Injection

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

33 閲覧数

article

8.7 : Parameters Affecting Nonlinear Elimination: Zero-Order Input, First-Order Absorption and Two-Compartment Model

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

33 閲覧数

article

8.8 : Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Dependence of Elimination Half-Life and Dose Clearance

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

66 閲覧数

article

8.9 : Chronopharmacokinetics: Circadian Rhythms and Influence on Drug Response

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

37 閲覧数

article

8.10 : Chronopharmacokinetics: Time-Dependent Pharmacokinetics

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

75 閲覧数

article

8.11 : Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Bioavailability and Protein-Drug Binding

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

99 閲覧数

article

8.12 : Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics: Role of Transporters

Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

25 閲覧数

JoVE Logo

個人情報保護方針

利用規約

一般データ保護規則

研究

教育

JoVEについて

Copyright © 2023 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved