This lesson introduces two critical methods in pharmacokinetics, the Wagner-Nelson and Loo-Riegelman methods, used for estimating the absorption rate constant (ka) for drugs administered via non-intravenous routes. The Wagner-Nelson method relates ka to the plasma concentration derived from the slope of a semilog percent unabsorbed time plot. However, it is limited to drugs with one-compartment kinetics and can be impacted by factors like gastrointestinal motility or enzymatic degradation.
On the other hand, the Loo-Riegelman method estimates ka by comparing plasma concentration-time profiles following different administration routes. It provides more comprehensive data, even for drugs with multicompartment characteristics, and aids in understanding drugs' relative bioavailability and absorption characteristics. Yet, it also has limitations, such as the concentration versus time data requirement for both oral and IV drug administration of the same subject and intra-subject between oral and IV administration studies.
From Chapter 7:
Now Playing
Pharmacokinetic Models
116 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
36 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
38 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
61 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
42 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
23 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
79 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
23 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
94 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
37 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
33 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
50 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
88 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
98 Views
Pharmacokinetic Models
70 Views
See More
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved