Sign In

3.15 : Drug Distribution: Volume of Distribution

The volume of distribution refers to the theoretical volume necessary to contain the entire amount of an administered drug at the same concentration observed in the blood plasma. The body's intracellular fluid compartment, which makes up two-thirds of the total body water, is contrasted with the extracellular fluid compartment—comprising plasma and interstitial fluid—that accounts for one-third. The volume of distribution can vary depending on the characteristics of the drug. High-molecular-weight or plasma-protein-bound drugs, which cannot pass through capillary slit junctions, accumulate in the plasma and have a low volume of distribution. Conversely, low-molecular-weight hydrophilic drugs can cross slit junctions but cannot penetrate the cell's lipid membranes, leading to accumulation in the extracellular space. Low-molecular-weight lipophilic drugs, which can cross slit junctions and easily enter the intracellular space, have a high volume of distribution. These drugs stay in the body longer because they remain in the extraplasmic space, making them inaccessible to elimination organs. This also means they require a higher loading dose to achieve the desired plasma concentration. In contrast, drugs with a low volume of distribution stay longer in the plasma, requiring a lower dose.

Tags
Volume Of DistributionDrug DistributionIntracellular FluidExtracellular FluidHigh molecular weight DrugsPlasma protein bound DrugsLow molecular weight Hydrophilic DrugsLipid MembranesLipophilic DrugsLoading DosePlasma Concentration

From Chapter 3:

article

Now Playing

3.15 : Drug Distribution: Volume of Distribution

Pharmacokinetics

2.5K Views

article

3.1 : Pharmacokinetics: Overview

Pharmacokinetics

2.9K Views

article

3.2 : Drug Absorption Mechanism: Passive Membrane Transport

Pharmacokinetics

2.7K Views

article

3.3 : Drug Absorption Mechanism: Carrier-Mediated Membrane Transport

Pharmacokinetics

2.7K Views

article

3.4 : Drug Absorption: Factors Affecting GI Absorption

Pharmacokinetics

3.0K Views

article

3.5 : Bioavailability: Overview

Pharmacokinetics

1.9K Views

article

3.6 : Factors Influencing Bioavailability: First-Pass Elimination

Pharmacokinetics

5.1K Views

article

3.7 : Bioequivalence: Overview

Pharmacokinetics

672 Views

article

3.8 : First Pass Effect

Pharmacokinetics

4.2K Views

article

3.9 : Time Course of Drug Effect

Pharmacokinetics

1.6K Views

article

3.10 : Drug Distribution: Tissue Binding

Pharmacokinetics

2.0K Views

article

3.11 : Physiological Barriers

Pharmacokinetics

2.8K Views

article

3.12 : Drug Distribution: Plasma Protein Binding

Pharmacokinetics

2.8K Views

article

3.13 : Compartment Models: Single-Compartment Model

Pharmacokinetics

1.7K Views

article

3.14 : Compartment Models: Two-Compartment Model

Pharmacokinetics

4.2K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved