Drug Absorption

Image

Absorption is the transfer of the drug into the bloodstream. In IV this process is complete thus the whole dose reaches the systemic circulation. However in other routes of administration the rate and efficiency is dependent on many factors and usually on ly results in partial absorption.

Transport in GIT

Due to their chemical properties, drugs are absorbed either by passive diffusion or active transport.

Passive diffusion: Passive diffusion is facilitated by the concentration gradient accross the membrane. The drug moves from high concentration to low concentration, it does not require an extra carrier or extra energy. Water-soluble agents use aquaous pors in the membrane while lipid soluble diffuse directly through the membrane.

Active transport: Active transport requires specific carries and ATP. The specific carrier protein carry the drugs that closerly resemble the structure of the naturally occurring metabolites specific for the carrier. It is capable of transporting from low to high concentration compartments.

Endocytosis: Endocytosis means that the membrane engulfes th drug moledule and transports it into the cell by pinching off the drug-filled vesicle. E.g. Vitamin B12 is transported this way.

Factors affecting absorption

pH, most drugs are either weak acids or weak bases. Drugs pass through membranes easier if uncharged. The effective concentration of each drug at the absorption site is determine by the relative concentrations of the charged and uncharged forms.

Blood Flow to the intestine is much more extensive than to the stomach as well as larger surface area favours the intestine for absorption.

Movement movement of the drug through the GIT has a large effect on its absorption. The faster it moves through thus decreasing its contact time at the absorption surface and therefore less is absorbed. This is the case in severe diarrhea. Also the presents of food dilutes the drug and slows gastric emptying and thus the drug is generally absorbed slower.

Longdom Publishing SL to accomplish its vision to make scientific information & health care open access has made a new initiation to enrich the scientific knowledge all around the world. As per the interest of the scientific community from Non-English speaking territories, we have introduced a new feature in the name of language translation. Language translation helps the scientific community to go through the articles in Chinese, Japanese & other world languages.

A standard editorial manager system is utilized for manuscript submission, review, editorial processing and tracking which can be securely accessed by the authors, reviewers and editors for monitoring and tracking the article processing. Manuscripts can be uploaded online at Editorial Tracking System www.longdom.org/submissions/developing-drugs.html or as an email attachment to drugs@echemistry.org

 

Media Contact:

Calvin Parker
Journal Manager
Journal of Developing Drugs
Email: drugs@echemistry.org