How Medications Get Absorbed By Your Body
Zusammenfassung
TLDRThe video details the process of medication absorption, which is crucial for understanding how drugs enter the bloodstream after administration. It explains different routes of administration including oral, intravenous, intramuscular, and subcutaneous, emphasizing the role of the liver in the first-pass effect that can reduce drug bioavailability. The segment also discusses various drug formulations and their impact on absorption rates, pointing out that factors such as dissolution speed, surface area of absorption, blood flow conditions, lipid solubility, and pH differences significantly influence how effectively a drug is absorbed into the body.
Mitbringsel
- 💊 Medication absorption is key for drug effectiveness.
- 📍 Oral drugs dissolve in the stomach or small intestine.
- 🏥 IV drugs enter directly into the bloodstream.
- ⚖️ First-pass effect can reduce bioavailability.
- 🧬 Drug formulations impact absorption rates.
- 🔄 Factors like surface area and blood flow affect absorption.
- 🌡️ High lipid solubility aids in easier absorption.
- 🥼 pH differences influence drug ionization and absorption.
Zeitleiste
- 00:00:00 - 00:04:19
Medication absorption refers to how a drug moves from its administration site into the bloodstream. Oral drugs dissolve in the stomach or pass to the small intestine, the main absorption site, where they enter the portal venous system to the liver for the first pass effect. This can inactivate part of the drug before it reaches general circulation. Unlike oral drugs, intravenous (IV) drugs enter the bloodstream directly, bypassing the GI tract, while intramuscular and subcutaneous injections also avoid GI absorption. Bioavailability is the degree a drug is absorbed into the bloodstream, with oral drugs typically having less than 100% bioavailability due to the liver's first pass effect, while IV drugs have 100%. Different drug formulations affect absorption rates, with factors like dissolution rate, surface area, blood flow, lipid solubility, and pH differences influencing the absorption process. Faster dissolving drugs are absorbed quicker, and the greater surface area of the small intestine enhances absorption compared to the stomach.
Mind Map
Video-Fragen und Antworten
What is medication absorption?
Medication absorption is the movement of a drug from its site of administration into the bloodstream.
How are oral drugs absorbed?
Oral drugs dissolve in the stomach or small intestine and pass through cell membranes into the bloodstream.
What is the first-pass effect?
The first-pass effect is when the liver metabolizes part of the drug before it reaches general circulation.
What does bioavailability mean?
Bioavailability is the net amount of a drug that is actually absorbed into the bloodstream.
How does intravenous drug administration differ from oral?
Intravenous drugs enter directly into the bloodstream, bypassing gastrointestinal absorption.
What factors affect drug absorption?
Factors include rate of dissolution, surface area, blood flow, lipid solubility, and pH partitioning.
Weitere Video-Zusammenfassungen anzeigen
- medication
- absorption
- bioavailability
- first-pass effect
- drug administration
- oral drugs
- IV drugs
- drug formulation
- pharmacokinetics
- dissolution