Drug toxicology

    Cards (62)

    • What is pharmacology?

      -The study of the effect of drugs on the function of living systems
    • What is toxicology?
      -The study of the effect of poisons on the function of living systems
      -"The dose makes the poison"
    • What are the 6 chemical agents that can cause toxicity?
      -Drugs
      -Insecticides/herbicides
      -Plant toxins (digoxin)
      -Animal toxins
      -Chemical weapons( sarin: novichok)
      -Radioactive elements (polonium 210)
    • What is an Adverse drug reaction?
      -Noxious or unintended responses occurring at therapeutic doses ~ 5% of all acute hospital admissions
    • Describe a Type A adverse reaction of a drug:
      -Augmemnted
      -Related to known pharmacology, but undesirable
      -Common, dose-related and predictable
    • Examples Type A ADRs
      -Haemorrhage with anticoagulants
      -Respiratory depression with opioids
      -Sedation with anxiolytic and older antihistamine drugs
    • Describe a Type B adverse reaction of a drug:
      -Bizarre
      -Unrelated to known pharmacology
      -Rare, unpredictable & often idiosyncratic
    • Example type B ADRs
      -Anaphylaxis with penicillin
      -Allergic liver damage by halothane
      -Bone marrow suppression by chloramphenicol
      -Individual allergy/genetic basis
    • What is toxikinetics?

      -The effects of the body on the poison
    • Absorption toxikinetics:
      -Ingestion: mercury and dioxin in fish
      pesticides in produce
      salmonella (diary), botulinum (meat) toxins
      -Inhalation: asbestos, nerve gases
    • Metabolism toxikinetics:
      -Phase I by cytochrome P450 (oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis)
      -Phase II conjugation to allow excretion in urine and bile
    • Excretion toxikinetics:
      -Toxins not excreted stored in:
      -bone (eg. lead)
      -fat (eg. DDE a metabolite of the pesticide DDT dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane)
      -The toxin may be released slowly into the body
    • What is detoxification?
      -Compound rendered less toxic
    • What is toxification?
      -Relatively inert compound converted into toxin
    • What is an allergic response?
      -Common form of ADR, usually with a different time course to pharmacological effects
      -4 clinical syndromes
    • Name & describe the 4 clinical syndromes of allergic reactions:
      -Type I hypersensitivity reaction is IgE-mediated mast cell degranulation

      -Type II antibody mediated cytotoxic hypersensitivity-
      involves haematological reactions i.e. those pertaining to the blood cells
      and blood-forming organs

      -Type III immune complex-mediated hypersensitivity

      -Type IV delayed-type hypersensitivity
    • What does a Type I hypersensitivity reaction trigger?
      -Anaphylactic shock
      -Low MW antigen enters (penicillin, peanut oil, bee venom)
      -Binds to hapten and forms immunogenic conjugate
      -Binds to mast cell
      -IgE recognition triggers histamine release
      -Causes bronchoconstriction, vasodilation & inflammation
      -Treat with adrenaline
    • What does a Type II hypersensitivity reaction cause ?
      -Depletion of RBCs, neutrophils or platelets
      -Toxic antigen binds to RBC
      -IgG binds to RBC and triggers complement mediated lysis
      -If T cell binds triggers T cells mediated cell lysis
      -Drugs in this category include sulphonamides, certain NSDAIS, quinine & heparin
    • What are the 4 superfamilies of receptors?
      -Ligand-gated ion channels ionotropic receptors
      voltage-gated ion channels
      -GPCRs - G protein coupled receptors (metabotropic receptors)
      -Enzyme-linked receptors (tyrosine kinase activity)
      -Nuclear receptors (regulate gene transcription)
    • Examples of animal toxin that blocks ion-conduction:
      -a-bungarotoxin on nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR
    • What do dendrotoxins do?
      -Block voltage gates potassium channels
      -Found in black and green mamba
    • Which toxins act on voltage gated calcium channels?
      -w-conotoxin from coneshell
      -w-agatoxin - from funnel web spider
      -SNX-482 from tarantula
    • What does tetrodotoxin do?
      -Acts on sodium channels to block action potentials
    • What are the cellular effects of enzyme mediated toxicology?
      -Increased secretion
      (eyes watering, nose running)
      -Convulsions
      -Bradycardia,
      hypotension
      -Bronchoconstriction
      respiratory
      depression
    • Examples of Irreversible anticholinesterase:
      -parathion
      -Sarin
      -Novichok
    • What are oximes?
      -Strong nucleophiles that reactivate AChesterase
    • What is the bodies first line of defence against biological nerve gas?
      -Atropine- mAChR blocker- central respiratory depression
      -Pralidoxime- reactivation of acetylcholinesterase
    • Biochemical pathways of toxicology:
      -Cyanide inhibits mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase to prevent cellular respiration
      -Carbon monoxide displaces oxygen from haemoglobin causing hypoxia
    • Which two organs are susceptible to toxin damage?
      -Liver
      -Kidney
    • Hepatotoxicity causes:
      -Hepatic necrosis from
      paracetamol poisoning
      -Paracetamol binds to protein thiol groups
    • Chronic liver damage:
      -Cirrhosis
      -long-term ethanol abuse causes cellular toxicity, inflammation and malnutrition as ethanol becomes a food source
    • What does halothane do?
      -Covalently binds to liver proteins to trigger autoimmune reaction in hepatitis
    • Clinical relevance of paracetamol:
      -Prominent cause of hepatic poisoning
      -48 % of all poison admissions and 200+ deaths/year
      -Overdose is due to enzyme saturation & glutathione depletion
      -Treat with glutathione precursors like Acetylcysteine & Methionine
    • Nephrotoxicity:
      -Organ-Directed Toxicity
      -Can cause changes in GFR, allergic and chronic nephritis
    • Allergic and chronic nephritis:
      -Allergic due to reaction to NSAIDs like fenoprofen and antibiotics like metacillin
      -Chronic due to long term use of NSAIDs and paracetamol
    • What are Proto-oncogenes?
      -Class of genes involved in carcinogenesis
      -Promote cell cycle progression
      -EXAMPLE: constitutive activity of growth factor tyrosine-kinase receptors can cause neoplastic transformation
    • What are tumour-suppressor genes?
      -Class of genes involved in carcinogenesis
      -Inhibit cell cycle progression
      -EXMAPLE: mutations in tumour suppression gene product p53 (prevalent in smokers)
    • What is teratogenicity?
      -The creation of birth defects during foetal development
      -Teratogens are the substances that induce birth defects e.g.., Thalidomide
      (S)-enantiomer
    • Case study: Contergan
      -Contains thalidomide
      -Marketed as a non-lethal hypnotic and sedative
      -Recommended as and ant-emetic to treat morning sickness in pregnant women
      -Teratogenic effects in 100% of foetuses exposed 3-6 week gestation
      -~8-12,000 infants were born with deformities caused by thalidomide, and only about 5,000 of these survived beyond childhood
      -Case dismissed
    • Thalidomide uses today:
      -Treat leprosy and multiple myeloma due to inhibitory activity on tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-a production
    See similar decks