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Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
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Page 1: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Psychopharmacology

Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics

Page 2: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Pharmacokinetics

• The time course of a particular drug’s action.

• Along with knowledge of the dosage taken, allows determination of:

– concentration of a drug at its receptors.

– intensity of drug effect on the receptors over time.

Page 3: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

PharmacokineticsFour Processes: ADME

1. Absorption: movement of drug from site of administration to the blood

2. Distribution: movement of drug from blood to rest of body

3. Metabolism: breakdown of drug 4. Elimination of drug’s metabolic

waste products from the body

Page 4: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Absorption

Major routes of administration:1. Oral administration2. Rectal administration3. Inhalation4. Absorption through mucous membranes5. Absorption through the skin6. Injection

Page 5: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Oral Administration

• Drug must be soluble and stable in stomach fluid.

• Absorbed through upper intestine through passive diffusion.

• Drugs must generally be somewhat lipid soluble.

• Disadvantages: – Vomiting and stomach distress– Hard to know how much of drug will be

absorbed due to genetic differences.– Stomach acid destroys some drugs.

Page 6: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Rectal Administration

• Used if patient is vomiting, unconscious, or unable to swallow.

• Absorption is often irregular, unpredictable, and incomplete.

Page 7: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Popular for recreational drugs (e.g., tobacco, marijuana, cocaine, heroin).

• Lung tissues’ large surface area allows for rapid absorption into blood.

• Pulmonary capillaries carry drug directly into left side of heart and then directly into the aorta and arteries going to the brain.

• Even faster onset than injection.

Inhalation

Page 8: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Absorbed through membranes in mouth or nose.

• Examples: heart patient’s nitroglycerine, cocaine, nasal decongestants, nicotine gum.

Mucus!

Page 9: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Pharmacokinetics

5. Administration Through the Skin– Transdermal patches provide

continuous, controlled release.– Allow for slow, continuous

absorption over hours or days, minimizing side effects.

– Examples: nicotine, fentanyl (for chronic pain), nitroglycerine (for angina pectoris), estrogen (hormone replacement therapy).

Page 10: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Intravenous Administration– Drug introduced directly into bloodstream.– Dosage can be extremely precise.– Fastest onset of pharmacological action

(most dangerous route). • Intramuscular Administration

• Drugs injected into skeletal muscle.• More rapid than absorption from stomach,

but slower than intravenous.• Type 1: Rapid onset/short duration of

action- Drug dissolved into aqueous solution.

• Type 2: Slow onset/prolonged duration- Drug suspended in oily solution.

• Subcutaneous Administration• Injected under the skin.

Injection

Page 11: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Drug molecules may be found in different places in the blood.

1. Plasma–more likely with water soluble drugs

2. Platelets–more likely with lipid soluble drugs

3. Attached to proteins (e.g., albumin)–bound vs. free

Distribution

Page 12: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Before the blood goes to the rest of the body from the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, it passes through the liver.

• The liver is the major organ that breaks down drugs.

• Therefore, a certain amount of the drug will be inactivated or metabolized as it goes through the liver.

• Other routes may not be subject to this “first pass” effect.

Taking the First Pass

Page 13: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• The brain must protect neurons from toxins.

• But the brain has a great need for nutrients and oxygen (it has a high blood flow), which increases the risk of toxic danger.

• Solution = the blood-brain barrier (BBB)

• Capillaries in brain do not allow drugs to pass as easily as capillaries in rest of body.

The BBB

Page 14: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Definition: Chemical changes that usually reduce the effect of drugs and increase their excretion.

• Kidneys filter waste from blood, collect it in bladder.

• Lipid-soluble drugs are hard for kidneys to hold onto; after collection, the molecules cross back into the circulation before they are excreted.

Metabolism

Page 15: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• The liver protects the body from toxic substances.– Contains enzyme systems that can

detoxify harmful substances.– Changes from highly lipid-soluble to

less lipid-soluble.– More likely to ionize.– May produce another lipid-

soluble molecule, an “active metabolite”

The Liver

Page 16: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Pharmacokinetics

Page 17: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Past experience with drugs will affect the enzyme systems.

• Levels of enzymes can be increased by previous exposure to a specific drug.

• Called enzyme induction.

Enzyme Induction

Page 18: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Examples and Consequences:St. John's Wort: (with active ingredient hyperforin) stimulates a receptor (SXR in humans, PXR in nonhumans) in the liver to induce CYP3A, which breaks down many other drugs: Theophylline (asthma), warfarin (anticlotting), birth control pills, and immunosuppressant cyclosporin.

St. John and Your Liver

Page 19: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Some drugs inhibit CYP enzymes and increase their own levels, as well as levels of any other drug metabolized by that enzyme. Can produce toxicities.

• Example: Inhibition of antipsychotic medication by SSRIs.

Enzyme Inhibition

Page 20: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Lithium • Mushroom amanita muscaria

– In large doses it is toxic and lethal; small amounts are hallucinogenic.

– Hallucinogenic ingredients are not greatly metabolized and are passed to the urine. Siberian tribespeople discovered this and recycled the drug by drinking their urine.

Intact Excretion

Page 21: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Primarily accomplished by

kidneys.2 organs (about the size of a fist)

located on either side of the spine in the back.

Keep the right balance of water and salt in the body

Filter everything out of blood and then selectively reabsorb what is required.

pH of urine can be manipulated to alter excretion of drugs.

Can be useful for eliminating certain drugs in overdose.

Excretion

Page 22: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

The rate of excretion for most drugs can be described in terms of a half-life: time taken for the body to eliminate half of a given blood level of a drug.

Half-Life (T-1/2)

Page 23: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.
Page 24: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

The Therapeutic Window

• For medical treatment, it is important that the right amount of drug is maintained in the blood.– If the amount is too high, the therapeutic effect

will not be any better, but there will be more undesirable side effects.

– If the amount is too low, it won’t have any beneficial effect.

• Drugs should be given in such a way that the blood concentration stays between a level that is too high and too low. This is called the Therapeutic Window.

Page 25: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Pharmacodynamics

• In contrast to pharmacokinetics (the study of what the body does to drugs), pharmacodynamics is the study of what a drug does to the body.

Page 26: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Receptors for Drug Action

1. Receptors are usually membrane-spanning proteins.

2. Not a simple globule, but a continuous series of amino acid loops embedded in the membrane.

3. Drugs and neurotransmitters attach inside between coils; held in place by ionic attractions. Classic concept of a receptor

Under Lock and Key

Page 27: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

4. Reversible ionic binding activates the receptor by altering the structure of the protein.

5. Intensity of signal partly determined by percentage of receptors active.

6. Drugs can affect signal by binding either to receptor

7. site or to nearby site.Schematic of 5-HT1A receptor

Binding

Page 28: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Receptors for Drug ActionBinding results in 1 of 3 actions:1. Binding to site of normal endogenous

neurotransmitter initiates similar cellular response (agonistic action).

2. Binding to nearby site to facilitate transmitter binding (allosteric agonistic action).

3. Binding to receptor site, blocking access of transmitter to binding site (antagonistic action).

Pharmacodynamics

Page 29: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Agonism and Antagonism

Page 30: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Ion Channel Receptors: Activation opens channel, allowing flow of ions to trigger or inhibit neural firing. – Benzodiazepines are GABA receptor

allosteric agonists.• Bind to nearby sites and facilitate GABA, flooding

neurons with Cl-, inhibiting neural actions.• Used as sedative, antianxiety, amnestic,

antiepileptic.

– Flumazenil binds to benzodiazepine site but does not interfere with GABA.

• Technically a benzodiazepine antagonist, used to treat benzodiazepine overdose.

Receptor Structure

Page 31: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• G Protein-Coupled Receptors: Induce release of intracellular protein, trigger second messengers.– Also called metabotropic receptors. – Control many cellular processes (e.g., ion

channel function, energy metabolism, cell division/differentiation, neuron excitability).

G Protiens

Page 32: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Carrier Proteins: Bind to neurotransmitters to transport them back to presynaptic neuron.– Many drugs block carrier proteins for a specific

neurotransmitter (e.g., SSRIs).

• Enzymes: Function to break down neurotransmitters in synaptic cleft.– Inhibition by drugs increases transmitter

availability.– Irreversible acetylcholine esterase inhibitors are

used as pesticides and nerve gases. – Monoamine oxidase inhibitors inhibit breakdown

of NE and DA (used as antidepressants).

Acting Indirectly

Page 33: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Dose Response

Page 34: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Potency = how well drug molecules attach to their sites of action (receptors).– More potent drugs usually attach better than

less potent drugs (binding); bind more tightly than less potent drugs.

– Binding = affinity. A more potent drug has greater affinity for its receptor (binds more tightly).• A less potent drug has less affinity for its receptor;

does not bind so tightly, can be more easily knocked off the receptor.

– Different drugs may bind to the same receptor, but with different affinities.

Potency

Page 35: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Refers to the mostly linear central part of the curve; how sharply the effect changes with each change in dose.

• If a small change in dose produces a large change in effect, the slope is steep.

• If even large changes in dose produce small changes in effect, the slope

is shallow.

A Slippery Slope

Page 36: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• The maximum effect obtainable, with additional doses producing no effect.

– Some drugs may be potent, but they might never be able to produce a peak response no matter how much is given.  

– A drug that is more efficacious (effective) can produce a greater peak, or maximum, effect than a drug that is less efficacious.

Efficacy

Page 37: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

Heroin and morphine have equal efficacies, with heroin more potent.

Aspirin has lower potency, efficacy, and slope than both heroin and morphine.

Efficacy, Potency, and Slope Illustrated

Page 38: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• ED50

– The drug dose that produces desired effect in 50 percent of test subjects.

• LD50

– The lethal dose for 50 percent of test subjects.

– Tested using experimental animals.

• Therapeutic Index = ratio of LD50 to ED50

The Therapeutic Index

Page 39: Psychopharmacology Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics.

• Many studies today use double-blind, randomized, controlled clinical trials. – However, even these trials can misrepresent the

placebo effect. – Notably, the placebo effect in antidepressant studies

has risen dramatically between 1980 and 2000. • Double-blind tests with a placebo run-in period

may eliminate much of the placebo effect.– In these tests, every patient is administered a placebo

for a week. Patients who respond positively are removed from study.

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