Transcript Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Drug Action
Across the Life Span
Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Chapter 3
Lesson 3.1
Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Slide 2
Objectives
• Discuss the effects of patient age on drug
action
• Discuss the role of genetics and its influence
on drug action
• Cite major factors associated with drug
absorption, distribution, metabolism, and
excretion in the pediatric and geriatric
populations
• Cite major factors associated with drug
absorption, distribution, metabolism,
and excretion in men and women
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Slide 3
Therapeutic Drug
Monitoring
• Entails measurement of a drug’s
concentration in biologic fluids to correlate the
dosage administered and the level of
medicine in the body with the pharmacologic
response
• Timing of drug’s administration and collection
of specimen are crucial to accurate
interpretation
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Slide 4
Use of Monitoring
Parameters
• Before administering medicine
Assess expected therapeutic actions, side
effects, reportable adverse effects, and
probable drug interactions
• Monitor parameters related to patient’s age
Absorption, distribution, metabolism, and
excretion of drugs are different for infants and
children
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Slide 5
Use of Monitoring Parameters:
Pediatric Patients
• Infants and young children are more
susceptible to dehydration
• Weight variation affects dosage
• Aspirin is never administered to children
• Allergic reactions occur rapidly in children,
most commonly to antibiotics
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Slide 6
Use of Monitoring Parameters:
Geriatric Patients
• Drug therapy
Take thorough drug history and nutritional
assessment
Determine whether new symptoms have
been induced by existing medicines
Gradually taper dosage when discontinuing
drug
Start at 1/3 to 1/2 normal dosage when
initiating therapy; gradually increase
Review regimen periodically
Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Slide 7
Changing Drug Action
With Gender Considerations
• In nearly every body system, men and
women function differently
• Men and women perceive and experience
disease differently
• Pharmacogenetics
Fundamental questions remain about how
humans function and the effect of disease on
function
• Polymorphisms
Naturally occurring variations in the structures
of genes
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Slide 8
Drug Absorption:
Age Considerations
• Special considerations for pediatric and older
adult patients
Differences in muscle mass, blood flow,
and inactivity affect medicines given
intramuscularly
Topical and transdermal administration differs
in the very young and the very old
• Factors that place older patients at risk
Reduced renal and hepatic function
Polypharmacy – multiple-drug therapy
required by chronic illness
A greater likelihood of malnourishment
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Slide 9
Drug Absorption:
Age Considerations (cont’d)
• Gastrointestinal absorption influenced by:
Gastric pH
Gastric emptying time
Enzymatic activity
Blood flow of mucous lining and intestines
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Slide 10
Age Considerations for
Infants
• Topical administration in infants is effective
because:
Outer layer of skin (stratum corneum) not fully
developed
Skin more fully hydrated; plastic diaper
increases skin hydration
Inflammation (diaper rash) increases
absorption
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Slide 11
Drug Absorption: Age
Considerations for Geriatric Patients
• Difficult to predict in geriatric patients
Dermal thickness decreases with age and may
enhance absorption
Drying, wrinkling, and decreased hair follicles
decrease absorption
Decreased cardiac output and diminishing
tissue perfusion also affect absorption
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Slide 12
Potentially Inappropriate
Medications for Geriatric Patients
• Includes medications that should be avoided
and those that are rarely appropriate
Some barbiturates, benzodiazepines, and
some narcotics
• Some are considered appropriate to give only
with certain indications but may have
potentially adverse reactions
Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Slide 13
Drug Absorption:
Gender Considerations
• Increased potential for toxicity and slower
absorption times in women
Empty solids more slowly
Have greater gastric acidity
Have lower gastric levels of alcohol
dehydrogenase needed to metabolize alcohols
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Slide 14
Drug Distribution
• Depends on pH, body water concentrations,
presence and quantity of fat tissue, protein
binding, cardiac output, and regional blood
flow
• Infants have larger volume of water content
and require higher dose
• With age, total body water decreases and fat
increases
• Highly fat-soluble drugs take longer to act
and accumulate in fat tissues, increasing
potential for toxicity
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Slide 15
Drug Distribution (cont’d)
• Protein binding
Drugs that are relatively insoluble are
transported in circulation by binding to
plasma proteins
• Age considerations
Some drugs have lower protein binding in
neonates and require larger loading dose
Albumin levels decrease with age
• Gender considerations
Some differences between men and
women in globulin proteins
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Slide 16
Drug Metabolism
• Drug metabolism
Process by which the body inactivates
medicine
Affected by genes, diet, age
Liver weight and hepatic blood flow decrease
with age
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Slide 17
Drug Excretion
• Metabolites of drugs (and sometimes the
drug itself) eventually excreted
• Preterm infant has 15% of adult renal
capacity; fully functional by 9 to 12 months
• Decreased renal function with age
• No prediction of renal function can be based
solely on age because of wide individual
variation in changes
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Slide 18
Parameters: Pregnant
Women
• Avoid drugs if at all possible
• When taking woman’s history, be alert to
possibility of pregnancy
• Instruct patient to avoid drugs, alcohol, and
tobacco
• Try nonpharmacologic treatments before
using medicines
• Avoid herbal medicines
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Slide 19
Drugs Known to be
Teratogenic
• Drug classifications known to be teratogenic
Androgenic and estrogenic hormones
ACE inhibitors, ethanol, tetracycline
Thalidomide, vitamin A, warfarin
Angiotension II receptor antagonists
Anticonvulsants, antimanic agent, antithyroid
Chemotherapy, statins, cocaine
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Slide 20
Use of Monitoring Parameters:
Breast-Feeding Infants
• Some drugs are known to enter breast milk
and harm the nursing infant
• Discuss all medications with physician
• Take medicine immediately after breastfeeding or just before infant’s longest
sleeping period
Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Slide 21