Top Banner
Introduction to Pharmacology Dr.Arul Amuthan Lecturer in Pharmacology Melaka Manipal Medical Colleg Manipal University 1
32
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 1. introduction, route of administration

Introduction to Pharmacology

Dr.Arul AmuthanLecturer in Pharmacology

Melaka Manipal Medical College Manipal University

1

Page 2: 1. introduction, route of administration

pharmacology - drug study

What is Pharmacology ?

Science that deals with the effects of drugs on living

system.

Sources, biological effects, therapeutic uses,

adverse effects and interactions of drugs2

Page 3: 1. introduction, route of administration

What is drug ?

Substance that modify the physiological systems or

pathological state for the benefit of the recipient.

3

Page 4: 1. introduction, route of administration

Pharmacokinetics:

What the body does to the drug

Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion

[ADME]

4

Page 5: 1. introduction, route of administration

Pharmacodynamics:

What the drug does to the body

Drug’s mechanism of action

Pharmacological effects of drug

Adverse effects of drugs

Drug interaction

5

Page 6: 1. introduction, route of administration

6

Pharmacotherapeutics:

Application of pharmacological information together

with disease knowledge for prevention and cure

Selection of drug, dose, duration of treatment

Toxicology:

Harmful effects of drug

Detection, prevention, treatment of poisoning

Study of adverse effects

Page 7: 1. introduction, route of administration

Clinical pharmacology:

Scientific study of drugs in man

7

P.kinetic/dynamic investigation in healthy and patients

Evaluation of efficacy and safety, adverse effects

Comparative trails, Surveillance

Page 8: 1. introduction, route of administration

SOURCES OF DRUGS

I. Natural sources

II. Semisynthetic sources

III. Synthetic sources

8

Page 9: 1. introduction, route of administration

Plants:

Morphine, codeine, atropine, quinine, digoxin

Animals: insulin, thyroxine

Microorganisms: penicillin, streptomycin

Minerals: iron, calcium, zinc

I. Natural sources:

9

Page 10: 1. introduction, route of administration

II Semisynthetic sources:

Ampicillin, Amoxicillin (semisynthetic penicillins)

Diacetyl morphine

III.Synthetic sources:

paracetamol, erythromycin, pethidine

10

Page 11: 1. introduction, route of administration

11

Drug nomenclature:

Chemical name - Generic name - Trade name

Page 12: 1. introduction, route of administration

3.Trade name: (brand, proprietary name)

Given by a pharmaceutical company

Sole property of the pharmaceutical company

A drug may have many proprietary names

Same company – different name in different countries

Prescription, over-the-counter drugs

Ecospirin, Disprin (for aspirin)

Crocin, Calpal (for paracetamol)12

Page 13: 1. introduction, route of administration

2.Generic name:

Assigned by - United States Adopted Name (USAN) council

British Approved Name (BAN) council

Used uniformly in all countries

After the drug included in pharmacopeia - official name

Aspirin, paracetamol

13

Page 14: 1. introduction, route of administration

1. Chemical name:

Is the name of chemical compound present in a drug

Acetyl salicylic acid, Acetaminophen

Not suitable for prescribing

Number is given before name is framed (Eg: INR00439)

14

Page 15: 1. introduction, route of administration

Sources of drug information

Pharmacopeia:

Book containing names of officially approved drugs

with their physical and chemical characteristics.

Eg: Indian Pharmacopoeia (IP)

BP, USP

15

Page 16: 1. introduction, route of administration

Non-official references:

Physicians’ Drug Reference (PDR)

Dental Drug Reference (Mosby)

Monthly Index of Medical Specialists (MIMS)

Medical journals:

The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences

Medical Journal of Malaysia, BMJ

US Food and Drug Administration (FDA): www.fda.gov16

Page 17: 1. introduction, route of administration

1. Enteral route: oral, sublingual, rectal routes

2. Parenteral routes: intradermal, subcutaneous,

intramuscular, intravenous, intra-arterial, intrathecal

3. Topical: skin and mucous membrane

4. Others: transdermal, inhalational

17

Route of drug administration

Page 18: 1. introduction, route of administration

Oral route: Advantages:

Safe, convenient for long use

Painless, self administered

Disadvantages:

Slow onset of action (not used in emergency)

Not suitable - in diarrhoea/vomiting/unconscious cases

- unpalatable/irritant drugs, unabsorbed drug

Aspirin, paracetamol, ibuprofen18

Page 19: 1. introduction, route of administration

Sublingual: Advantages:

Quick onset of action, bypass first pass metabolism

Self administered, terminated by spiting out

Disadvantages:

In children

Bad smell & lipid insoluble drugs

Nitroglycerin for angina

19

Page 20: 1. introduction, route of administration

Advantages:

Unpleasant drugs

In vomiting, unconscious cases

Disadvantages:

Inconvenient, embarrassing

Causes rectal inflammation

Prednisolone for ulcerative colitis

Ergotamine, diazepam for systemic effect20

Enema (fluid)

suppositories (tablets)

Rectal:

Page 21: 1. introduction, route of administration

Parenteral routes & site:

21

Page 22: 1. introduction, route of administration

Intradermal:

Disadvantages:

Painful, no self administration

small amount of drug is administered

Eg: BCG vaccine, drug sensitivity tests

22

Page 23: 1. introduction, route of administration

Subcutaneous:

Advantages:

Self administration is possible

Depot can be inserted into sc

Disadvantages:

Slow absorption, not useful in emergency

Suitable only for non-irritant drugs

Eg: Insulin, adrenaline

23

Page 24: 1. introduction, route of administration

Intramuscular: Advantages:Rapid absorptionDepot injections10 ml can be given at a timeUseful in vomiting, diarrhea, unconscious patientsBypass first pass metabolism

Disadvantages:Sterilization requiredPainful, no self administrationInjury to nerve, cause abscess

Eg: gentamicin, streptomycin, kanamycin 24

Page 25: 1. introduction, route of administration

Intravenous: Advantages:

Directly reaches blood

Bypass first pass metabolism, 100% bioavailability

Emergency – fast onset of action

Large volume infused – iv fluids

High irritant drugs is given

Useful in vomiting, diarrhea, unconscious patients

Eg: furosemide, diazepam

25

Page 26: 1. introduction, route of administration

Intravenous: Disadvantages:

Once administered, can’t be stopped

Painful, no self medication

Strict aseptic precautions

Extravasation causes tissue necrosis

Causes thrombophlebitis

26

Page 27: 1. introduction, route of administration

Topical: (skin and mucous membrane)

Advantages:

More convenient, encouraging to patient

Efficiently delivered to local lesion areas

Disadvantages:

Local irritation, dermatitis

silver sulfadiazine ointment, diclofenac gel

27

Page 28: 1. introduction, route of administration

Transdermal/Transcutaneous:

Adhesive patch

28

Page 29: 1. introduction, route of administration

Advantages:

Self administered, better patient compliance

Prolonged duration of action

Less systemic side effect

Disadvantages:

Expensive

Local irritation causes dermatitis, itching

Patch may fall off unnoticed

scopolamine, nitroglycerine, oestrogen29

Page 30: 1. introduction, route of administration

Inhalational:

Volatile liquids and gases are given for systemic effects

Advantages:

Absorption through alveoli, rapid onset of action

Less dose is enough, so less systemic toxicity

Amount of drug can be regulated

Disadvantages:

Irritation causes bronchospasm and high secretion

General anaesthetics – nitrous oxide, ether, halothane30

Page 31: 1. introduction, route of administration

Drug into subarachnoid space - Intrathecal

31

Intrathecal – lignocaine, amphotericin

Intra articular – hydrocortisone

Page 32: 1. introduction, route of administration

33