Pharmacology 2060A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Molecular Mass, Proximal Tubule, Arteriole

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Drug excretion: the removal of parent drug and drug metabolites from the body. The kidneys account for the majority of drug excretion. Healthy kidneys serve to limit the duration and intensity of drug effects. Decreased kidney function prolongs the duration of action and intensity of drug effects. The basic structural and functional unit of the kidney. Controls blood volume, blood pressure, blood ph and solute (including drug) excretion. Factors affecting renal drug excretion: glomerular filtration, tubular secretion, tubular reabsorption, glomerular filtration. Drugs enter the kidney from the renal artery. Hydrostatic pressure within glomerular capillaries forces low molecular weight drugs into the renal tubules. Glomerular filtration rate is ~120ml/min/1. 73m2 or about 20% of total renal plasma flow. Lipid solubility and ph do not affect glomerular filtration of drugs. Only non-protein bound (i. e. free) drugs are filtered at the glomerulus: tubular secretions. Drugs not filtered by the glomerulus leave the glomerulus by the efferent arteriole.

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