Drugs and the Body
Pharmacodynamics
- Pharmacodynamics is the science of dealing with interactions between living organisms and foreign chemicals
- Chemical reactions occur continuously in the body of each living system
- When other chemicals (drugs) are added to the body, additional effects occur
Drug Actions
- To replace or act as substitutes for missing chemicals
- To increase or stimulate certain cellular activities
- To depress or slow certain cellular activities
- To interfere with the functioning of foreign cells
Receptor Cells
- Receptor site reacts to certain chemicals
- The better the fit between receptor site and chemical, the more pronounced the reaction
- Enzymes within the body are needed to break down the chemicals to open up the receptor site
Lock & Key

Drugs and The Body: Lock and Key
Enzymes
- Drugs can interfere with the enzymes that may be catalysts for chemical reactions
- Enzymes produce a cascade effect
Pharmacokinetics
- Onset of drug action
- Drug half-life
- Timing of the peak effect
- Duration of drug effects
- Metabolism or biotransformation of the drug
- Site of excretion
The Processes by Which Drugs Are Handled in the Body

The Processes by Which Drugs Are Handled in the Body
Pharmacokinetics
- Critical concentration
- The amount of a drug that is needed to cause a therapeutic effect
- Loading dose
- A higher dose than that usually used for treatment
- Dynamic equilibrium
- The actual concentration that a drug reaches in the body
Dynamic Equilibrium
- The actual amount of drug that reaches the body results in a dynamic equilibrium
- Dynamic equilibrium is affected by:
- Absorption
- Distribution
- Biotransformation
- Excretion
Absorption
- Administration
- Affected by route of administration
- Oral medications affected by presence of food in the stomach
- First-pass effect
- Medications are extensively metabolized by the liver
Factors Affecting Absorption

Factors That Affect Absorption of Drugs
Distribution
- Protein binding
- Blood–brain barrier
- Placenta/breast milk
Biotransformation
- The liver is the single most important site for biotransformation (metabolism)
- This process breaks down medications
- It helps to prevent medications from causing adverse effects on the body
Excretion
- Removal of drugs from the body
- Kidneys play the most important role in the excretion of medication
Half-Life
- Half-life is the time it takes for the amount of drug in the body to decrease to one-half the peak level
- Half-life is affected by the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion
Pharmacokinetics

Pharmacokinetics
Half-life

Half-Life
Calculating Half-Life

Focus on Calculations
Factors Influencing Drug Effects
- Weight
- Age
- Gender
- Physiologic factors
- Pathologic factors
- Genetic factors
- Immunologic factors
- Psychological factors
- Environmental factors
- Drug tolerance
- Cumulative effect
Drug-to-Drug Interactions
- Can occur any time two or more drugs are taken together
- Can occur at:
- Site of absorption
- During distribution
- During biotransformation
- During excretion
- At the site of action
Drug–Food Interaction
- Certain foods interact with drugs
- Drugs are best taken on an empty stomach
Drug–Laboratory Test Interaction
- Drugs may alter the results of lab testing
- Laboratory tests may be used to monitor the effects of other medications
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