妊娠期药物的命运。

J C Mucklow
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引用次数: 0

摘要

母亲和胎儿/新生儿对给药孕妇的反应很大程度上取决于药物的处置和消除在母亲和胎儿之间。妊娠期发生的生理变化可能导致血浆蛋白结合减少,表观分布体积增加,某些药物的代谢和肾脏清除率比通常在非妊娠妇女中发现的更快。结果与单次给药后达到的药物峰值浓度、药物的半衰期和胎儿通过胎盘暴露的药物浓度有关。怀孕期间可能需要改变剂量的药物包括大多数抗惊厥药、锂、地高辛、某些受体阻滞剂、氨苄西林和头孢呋辛;对于没有专门研究过的药物,不可能一概而论。妊娠期给予的药物很少不能穿过胎盘,通常,不与血浆蛋白结合的药物分子沿着浓度梯度扩散,以建立和维持平衡。由于药物分子的运动是双向的,所以胎盘既是药物进出胎儿的主要通道,也是药物进入胎儿的主要通道。胎儿对所接受药物的药理反应主要取决于胎儿血液中药物的未结合浓度——如果母亲给药剂量正确,很少会发生不良反应;例外情况包括四环素、抗甲状腺药物、香豆素抗凝血剂、阿司匹林、吲哚美辛和大脑抑制剂(阿片类药物、巴比妥类药物和吩噻嗪类)。胎盘胎儿侧的总药物浓度(结合的和未结合的)通常低于母体侧,除非血液pH值和/或蛋白质结合的差异导致药物在胎儿中被“捕获”;后一种现象可能在出生后被证明是危险的,因为新生儿通过代谢和排泄消除药物的能力有限。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The fate of drugs in pregnancy.

The response of mother and fetus/neonate to drugs administered to the pregnant woman is determined largely by drug disposition and elimination within and between mother and fetus. Physiological changes occurring in pregnancy may result in reduced plasma protein binding, an increase in the apparent volume of distribution, and more rapid metabolic and renal clearance of certain drugs than are usually found in non-pregnant women. The consequences are relevant for the peak concentration of drug achieved after a single dose, the half-life of the drug, and the drug concentration to which the fetus is exposed via the placenta. Drugs whose dosage may need to be altered in pregnancy include most anticonvulsants, lithium, digoxin, certain beta-blockers, ampicillin and cefuroxime; for drugs which have not been specifically investigated, no generalizations are possible. Very few drugs given in pregnancy fail to cross the placenta and, as a rule, drug molecules not bound to plasma protein diffuse along a concentration gradient to establish and maintain an equilibrium. Because movement of drug molecules is bidirectional, the placenta is the main portal of exit from, as well as entry to, the fetus. The pharmacological response of the fetus to drugs which it receives depends mainly on the unbound concentration of drug in fetal blood--unwanted effects seldom occur if the maternal dose is correct; exceptions include tetracycline, antithyroid drugs, coumarin anticoagulants, aspirin, indomethacin and cerebral depressant drugs (opiates, barbiturates and phenothiazines). The total (bound plus unbound) drug concentration on the fetal side of the placenta is usually lower than on the maternal side except where differences in blood pH and/or protein binding lead to 'trapping' of drug in the fetus; the latter phenomenon may prove hazardous after birth because of the neonate's limited capacity to eliminate drugs by metabolism and excretion.

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