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Renal Excretion of Drugs 3

Renal excretion is a major route of drug elimination. Drugs can be excreted through glomerular filtration, tubular secretion, or tubular reabsorption. Glomerular filtration allows passage of small, water soluble molecules through the kidneys. Tubular secretion is an active transport process that moves drugs against a concentration gradient. Tubular reabsorption moves drugs from the tubular fluid back into circulation. The rates of these processes determine a drug's renal clearance and elimination from the body.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
479 views36 pages

Renal Excretion of Drugs 3

Renal excretion is a major route of drug elimination. Drugs can be excreted through glomerular filtration, tubular secretion, or tubular reabsorption. Glomerular filtration allows passage of small, water soluble molecules through the kidneys. Tubular secretion is an active transport process that moves drugs against a concentration gradient. Tubular reabsorption moves drugs from the tubular fluid back into circulation. The rates of these processes determine a drug's renal clearance and elimination from the body.
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Renal Excretion of Drugs

1-Glumarular Filtration
2-Tubular Secretion
3-Tubular Reabsorption
RENAL DRUG EXCRETION

 Renal excretion is a major route of elimination for many


drugs.
 Drugs that are eliminated by renal excretion are;
i- Nonvolatile,
ii-Water soluble,
iii- Have a low molecular weight (MW),
iv- Slowly bio transformed by the liver.
 The processes by which a drug is excreted via the kidneys
may include any combination of the following:
1-Glomerular filtration
2- Active tubular secretion
3- Tubular reabsorption
1-Glomerular filtration

 Glomerular filtration is unidirectional process that occurs


for most small molecules (MW < 500) dissociated (ionized)
drugs.
 Protein-bound drugs behave as large molecules and do not
get filtered at the glomerulus.
 The major driving force is the hydrostatic pressure within
the glomerular capillaries.
GFR-----

 Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is measured by using a


drug ,eliminated by filtration only
(the drug is neither reabsorbed nor secreted).
E.g.. inulin and creatinine.
 GFR is equal to 125-130 ml/min.
 The value for the GFR correlates fairly well with body
surface area.
GFR--------

 Glomerular filtration of drugs is directly related to the free


or non protein-bound drug concentration in the plasma.
 As the free drug concentration in the plasma increases,
the glomerular filtration for the drug increases
proportionately, thus increasing renal drug clearance for
some drugs.
2-Tubular secretion

  It
is the transfer of materials from peritubular capillaries
to renal tubular lumen, and is the opposite process of
reabsorption.
 This secretion is caused mainly by active transport and
passive diffusion.
 Usually only a few substances are secreted, and are
typically waste products.
Active tubular secretion

 It is an active transport process.


 It is a carrier-mediated system that requires energy input,
because the drug is transported against a concentration
gradient.
 The carrier system is capacity limited and may be saturated.
 Drugs with similar structures may compete for the same
carrier system.
 For example, probenecid competes with penicillin for the
same carrier system.
 Two active renal secretion systems have been identified, for
(1) weak acids
(2) weak basis
 Active tubular secretion rate is dependent on renal
plasma flow.
 Drugs commonly used to measure active tubular
secretion include p -amino-hippuric acid (PAH) and
iodopyracet (Diodrast).
 These substances are both filtered by the glomeruli and
secreted by the tubular cells.
 Active secretion is extremely rapid for these drugs, and
practically all the drug carried to the kidney is eliminated
in a single pass.
 The clearance for these drugs therefore reflects the
effective renal plasma flow (ERPF), which varies from 425
to 650 mL/min.
Effect of drug protein binding on active
secretion
 For a drug that is excreted solely by glomerular filtration,
the elimination half-life may change markedly in
accordance with the binding affinity of the drug for
plasma proteins.
 Drug protein binding has very little effect on the
elimination half-life of the drug excreted mostly by active
secretion.
 Because drug protein binding is reversible, drug bound to
plasma protein rapidly dissociates as free drug is secreted
by the kidneys.
 For example, some of the penicillins are extensively
protein bound, but their elimination half-lives are short
due to rapid elimination by active secretion.
Mechanisms of Secretion

 The mechanisms by which secretion occurs are similar to


those of reabsorption, but
in the opposite direction.
 Passive Diffusion-
movement of molecules from the peritubular capillaries to
the interstitial fluid within the nephron by concentration
gradient.
 Active transport-
movement of molecules via ATPase pumps, that transport
the substance through the renal epithelial cell into the
lumen of the nephron.
 The substances that are secreted into the tubular fluid for
removal from the body include:
  potassium ions (K+),
 hydrogen ions (H+),
 ammonium ions (NH4+),
 creatinine, urea some hormones, and some drugs (e.g.,
penicillin).
3-Tubular reabsorption
 The process by which solutes and water are removed from
the tubular fluid and transported into the blood.
 It occurs after the drug is filtered through the glomerulus.
 It can be an active or a passive process.
Mechanisms of Reabsorption

 As the fluid filtered from blood, called filtrate, passes


through the nephron, much of the filtrate and its contents
are reabsorbed into the body.
 Reabsorption is a finely tuned process that is altered in
maintaining homeostasis of blood volume, blood
pressure, plasma osmolarity, and blood pH.
 Reabsorbed fluids, ions, and molecules are returned to
the bloodstream through the peri-tubular capillaries, and
are not excreted as urine.
Mechanisms of Reabsorption cont…..

 The mechanisms of reabsorption into the peri-tubular capillaries


include:
1- Passive Diffusion-
passing through plasma membranes of the kidney epithelial cells by
concentration gradients.
2- Active Transport-
membrane bound ATPase pumps (NA+/K+ ATPase pumps) with carrier
proteins carry substances across the plasma membranes of the kidney
epithelial cells by consuming ATP.
3- Cotransport
this process is particularly important for reabsorption of water.
Water can follow other molecules that are actively
transported, particularly glucose and sodium ions in the
nephron.
4- Through tight junctions
Some substances can also pass through tiny spaces in between
the renal epithelial cells, called tight junctions.
 For completely reabsorbed (eg, glucose),the value of
clearance of the drug is approximately zero.
 For drugs that are partially reabsorbed, clearance values
are less than the GFR of 125-130 ml/min.
Factors affecting reabsorption

1- The pH of the fluid in the renal tubule (ie,urine)


2- The pKa of the drug
effects the reabsorption of drugs that are weak acids or
weak bases.
 Both of these factors determine the percentage of
dissociated and un dissociated drug.
 The undissociated species is more lipid soluble and
greater membrane permeable and is easily reabsorbed.
 The pKa of the drug is a constant, but the normal urinary
pH may vary from 4.5 to 8.0, depending on diet,
pathophysiology, and drug intake.
Difference between reabsorption and RENAL
SECRETION
RENAL SECRETION REABSORPTION

1- deals with filtering, cleaning of 1- Deals with retaining them


Substances from the blood.
2- occurs throughout the nephron, 2- takes place in distil parts of the
from the proximal convoluted tubules mostly.
tubule to the collecting duct at the
end of the nephron.
RENAL CLEARANCE OF DRUGS

 Renal clearance , ClR , is defined as the volume of plasma


that is cleared of drug per unit time through the kidney.
 Similarly, renal clearance may be defined as a constant
fraction of the VD that is excreted by the kidney per unit
time.
 Renal clearance is defined as the urinary drug excretion
rate (dDu /dt ) divided by the plasma drug concentration
(C p ).
 For any drug cleared through the kidney, the rate of the
drug passing through kidney (via filtration, reabsorption,
and/or active secretion) must equal the rate of drug
excreted in the urine.
 Rate of drug passing through kidney = rate of drug
excreted 
 ClR is renal clearance,
 Cp is plasma drug concentration,
 Qu is the rate of urine flow
 Cu is the urine drug concentration.
As the excretion rate = Qu Cu = dDu /dt
 Renal clearance may be measured as
DETERMINATION OF
RENAL CLEARANCE

1- Graphical Methods
 When the rate of drug excreted in
urine (dDu/dt) is plotted against Cp, the clearance is given
by the slope of the curve obtained .
 For a drug that is excreted rapidly, dDu/dt is large, the
slope is steeper, and clearance is greater (line A).
 For a drug that is excreted slowly through the kidney, the
slope is smaller (line B).
FILTRATION AND ACTIVE SECRETION

 For a drug that is primarily filtered and secreted, with


negligible reabsorption, the overall excretion rate will
exceed GFR .
 At low drug plasma concentrations, active secretion is not
saturated, and the drug is excreted by filtration and active
secretion.
 At high concentrations, the percentage of drug excreted
by active secretion decreases due to saturation.
Excretion rate-versus-plasma level curves for
a drug that demonstrates active tubular secretion and
a drug that is secreted by glomerular filtration only.
 Graph representing the
decline of renal clearance.
 As the drug plasma level
increases to a concentration that saturates the active
tubular secretion, glomerular filtration becomes the major
component for renal clearance.
Model-Independent Methods

 Clearance rates may also be estimated by a single


(nongraphical) calculation from knowledge of the [AUC] ,
the total amount of drug absorbed, FD0 , and the total
amount of drug excreted in the urine, Du .
 For example, if a single IV bolus drug injection is given to a
patient and the [AUC]is obtained from the plasma drug
level-time curve, then total body clearance is estimated
by
 If the total amount of drug excreted in the urine, Du has been
obtained, then renal clearance is calculated by

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