Entrar

The selection of a drug's delivery route depends upon its physicochemical properties, including lipid or water solubility and ionization, as well as the therapeutic requirement, such as immediate or sustained effect. These routes can be divided into three primary categories: enteral, parenteral, and topical.

Enteral delivery involves administering drugs directly through swallowing, sublingual placement, or buccal application. Orally administered drugs predominantly navigate the gastrointestinal tract for systemic absorption. However, this method has limitations, such as inadequate absorption, gastric irritation, instability in low gastric pH, and metabolism by gut flora. Notably, most enteral drugs are designed to address these drawbacks, ultimately leading to good absorption. For instance, drug formulations have been developed with protective coatings to limit drug degradation in the stomach.

Parenteral delivery, on the other hand, involves the direct injection of drugs into the bloodstream, muscles, dermis, or subcutaneous tissue, providing varying degrees of bioavailability. Amongst various parenteral routes, intravenous administration offers the highest bioavailability and the fastest onset of action.

Lastly, topical administration involves applying medication to the skin or mucous membranes. This method generally targets local effects, but some drugs applied topically can have systemic effects. For example, transdermal fentanyl patches deliver drugs systemically over time.

In conclusion, the choice of drug delivery route is critical to ensuring effective treatment. Each route has unique advantages and limitations that must be considered.

Do Capítulo 3:

article

Now Playing

3.3 : Drug Delivery: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

223 Visualizações

article

3.1 : Drug Administration and Therapy Phases: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

342 Visualizações

article

3.2 : Drug Absorption: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

404 Visualizações

article

3.4 : Drug Delivery: Enteral Route

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

288 Visualizações

article

3.5 : Drug Delivery: Parenteral Route

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

297 Visualizações

article

3.6 : Drug Delivery: Miscellaneous Routes

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

258 Visualizações

article

3.7 : Cellular Membranes and Drug Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

197 Visualizações

article

3.8 : Mechanisms of Drug Absorption: Paracellular, Transcellular, and Vesicular Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

260 Visualizações

article

3.9 : Passive Diffusion: Overview and Kinetics

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

241 Visualizações

article

3.10 : Pore Transport and Ion-Pair Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

259 Visualizações

article

3.11 : Carrier-Mediated Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

176 Visualizações

article

3.12 : Facilitated Diffusion

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

221 Visualizações

article

3.13 : Active Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

291 Visualizações

article

3.14 : Vesicular Trasport: Endocytosis, Transcytosis and Exocytosis

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

473 Visualizações

article

3.15 : Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Anatomical Parameters

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

129 Visualizações

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidade

Termos de uso

Políticas

Pesquisa

Educação

SOBRE A JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos os direitos reservados