Pharmacology 3620 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Lateral Ventricles, Pleural Effusion, Time Point

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Absorption is the transfer of drug from its site of administration to the bloodstream (systemic circulation). Oral drug administration is the most common route of administration and thus the extent of intestinal drug absorption impacts the dose of many drugs. Drugs that are administered intravenously are considered to be entirely absorbed into the bloodstream: that is, the dose of iv drug is equal to the amount that gets in the body. All of the following factors affect absorption of a drug: Physiochemical characteristics: lipophilicity, drug ionization, chemical stability, molecular weight. Pharmaceutical factors: timing of drug release (slow, ph of lumen fast, continuous, site of drug release, tablet additives which may influence how the drug is absorbed. Physiology: surface area, blood circulation, gastric emptying time, first-pass effect, intestinal drug transporters. Interactions: co-prescribed drugs, whether food was taken too, diseases. For example, gastric emptying time influences the length of time a pill would reside in the stomach before entering circulation.

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