Pharmacokinetics - Elimination: Nursing pharmacology

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Pharmacokinetics - Elimination: Nursing pharmacology

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Drug administration and dosing regimens
Hyperbilirubinemia: Nursing process (ADPIE)
Sickle cell disease: Nursing process (ADPIE)
Antibiotics - Aminoglycosides: Nursing pharmacology
Antiarrhythmics: Nursing pharmacology
Immunosuppressants for autoimmune diseases: Nursing pharmacology
Celiac disease: Nursing process (ADPIE)
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS): Nursing
Somatosensory pathways
Pericarditis: Nursing
Pharmacokinetics - Elimination: Nursing pharmacology
Anatomy clinical correlates: Glossopharyngeal (CN IX), vagus (X), spinal accessory (CN XI) and hypoglossal (CN XII) nerves
MEN syndromes: Clinical
Anatomy clinical correlates: Vertebral canal
Anatomy clinical correlates: Spinal cord pathways
Anatomy clinical correlates: Posterior blood supply to the brain
Abdominal pain: Clinical
Gastrointestinal bleeding: Clinical
Local anesthetics
Migraine medications
Nonbenzodiazepine anticonvulsants
Stroke: Clinical
Gastrointestinal system anatomy and physiology
Glucocorticoids
Typical antipsychotics
Non-corticosteroid immunosuppressants and immunotherapies
Pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts
Cholinomimetics: Direct agonists
Atypical antipsychotics
Action potentials in myocytes
Action potentials in pacemaker cells
Excitability and refractory periods
Cardiac excitation-contraction coupling
ACE inhibitors, ARBs and direct renin inhibitors
Muscle weakness: Clinical
Hyperthyroidism medications
Oxygen binding capacity and oxygen content
Hypocalcemia
Resting membrane potential
Opioid agonists, mixed agonist-antagonists and partial agonists
Hyperplasia and hypertrophy
Leukodystrophy
Complement system
Hypothyroidism medications
Regulation of renal blood flow
Distal convoluted tubule
Sodium homeostasis
Insulin
Parathyroid hormone
Chronic bronchitis
Pulmonary corticosteroids and mast cell inhibitors
Seronegative arthritis: Clinical
Blood transfusion reactions and transplant rejection: Pathology review
Hunger and satiety
Emphysema
Normal heart sounds
Nervous system anatomy and physiology
Insulins
Pigmentation skin disorders: Pathology review
Anatomy of the inferior mediastinum
Osteoporosis
Approach to pneumoperitoneum and peritonitis (perforated viscus): Clinical sciences
Bacteroides fragilis
Shigella
Diabetes mellitus: Pathology review
Hematopoietic medications
Non-biologic disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs)
Class IV antiarrhythmics: Calcium channel blockers and others
Amyloidosis
Immunodeficiencies: Phagocyte and complement dysfunction: Pathology review
Cytokines
Gallstone ileus
Dementia: Pathology review
Appendicitis: Pathology review
Complement deficiency
Cholesterol metabolism
Adrenergic antagonists: Alpha blockers
Class I antiarrhythmics: Sodium channel blockers
Anatomy clinical correlates: Other abdominal organs
Anatomy of the breast
Atrial fibrillation
Factor V Leiden
Iron deficiency anemia
Sickle cell disease (NORD)
Seizures: Pathology review
Respiratory system anatomy and physiology
Pulmonary edema
Developmental and learning disorders: Pathology review
Anatomy and physiology of the male reproductive system
Prostate cancer
Arterial disease

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Pharmacokinetics refers to the movement and modification of a medication inside the body. So once the medication is administered, first it has to be absorbed into the circulation, then distributed to various tissues throughout the body, metabolized or broken down, and finally, eliminated or excreted in the urine or feces.

You can remember this with the acronym ADME; which stands for Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, and Elimination.

Okay, now let’s focus on elimination, which is the process of removing medications and their metabolites from the body through excretion.

This is done primarily by the kidneys, through glomerular filtration, meaning that certain medications can be filtered out as the blood flows through the glomerulus.

In addition, as the filtrate makes its way through the renal tubules, other medications from the peritubular capillaries get actively secreted into the tubular lumen, while others are passively reabsorbed into the blood.

Ultimately, the medications that are filtered, secreted, and not reabsorbed, end up being excreted from the body via urine.

Aside from the kidneys, medications can also be eliminated through the gastrointestinal or GI tract.

So orally administered medications that do not get absorbed along the GI tract are directly passed in feces.

On the other hand, some medications undergo a process of enterohepatic circulation, when a medication is transferred by the liver into the bile.

After that, bile carrying the medication is released into the GI tract, where the medication can be reabsorbed, entering the portal circulation, to ultimately return to the liver.

At this point, the process of enterohepatic circulation occurs again, and the liver transfers the medication back into the bile to be secreted into the GI tract, until it’s ultimately eliminated from the body through the feces.

Lastly, small amounts of certain medications can be cleared out of the body through the lungs as we exhale air, as well as through sweat, saliva, tears, and even breast milk.

Now, there are several factors that can affect the elimination of medications. First of all, impaired renal function or any condition that decreases the cardiac output, can result in decreased glomerular filtration rate, which can lead to the buildup of medications inside the body.

Urine pH also affects elimination. For example, if the urine is alkaline, acidic medications don’t get reabsorbed, so they get excreted in the urine instead.

Another factor affecting elimination is impaired hepatic function, which affects the liver’s ability to metabolize or break down the medication.

As a result, the elimination process can slow down and lead to increased levels of the medication inside the body for a longer period of time.

Finally, if certain medications are administered together, they can affect each other’s elimination. An example of this is probenecid, which is often given along with penicillin.

That’s because probenecid slows down the elimination of penicillin, letting it stay longer in the bloodstream, and increasing its effectiveness.

Now, let’s look at the half-life of a medication, which is the time required for the blood concentration of a medication to be reduced by half; and this mainly depends on the pharmacokinetic phases of metabolism and elimination.

So, for example, if a medication’s half-life is two hours, this means that it takes two hours for the concentration of that medication to drop from 100 to 50 mg/liter.

Alright, before administering any medication to your client, remember to keep in mind some of the general pharmacokinetic principles that relate to how the medication is eliminated from your client’s body.

Sources

  1. "Focus on Nursing Pharmacology" LWW (2019)
  2. "Pharmacology" Elsevier Health Sciences (2014)
  3. "Mosby's 2021 Nursing Drug Reference" Mosby (2020)
  4. "Saunders Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN Examination" Saunders (2016)
  5. "Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 13th Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2017)
  6. "Lehne's Pharmacology for Nursing Care" Saunders (2018)
  7. "Medication Safety Tips for the Breastfeeding Mom" Healthy Children (2015)