Intro & Classification - Friendly Fire?
- Drug Interaction (DI): Modification of a drug's effect by another drug, food, or herbal product.
- Significance: May ↑ or ↓ therapeutic effects or ↑ adverse effects (ADRs).
- Types:
- Pharmacokinetic (PK): Body's handling of drug (ADME) altered.
- E.g., enzyme induction/inhibition affecting metabolism.
⭐ Grapefruit juice is a potent inhibitor of CYP3A4, increasing levels of many drugs.
- Pharmacodynamic (PD): Drug's action on body altered.
- E.g., synergistic or antagonistic effects at receptors.
- Pharmaceutical: In vitro incompatibility (e.g., IV admixture).
- Pharmacokinetic (PK): Body's handling of drug (ADME) altered.
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Interactions - ADME Antics
Alters drug conc. via Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion (ADME).
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Absorption (A):
- pH changes: Antacids ↓ketoconazole.
- Chelation: Tetracycline + $Ca^{2+}$ ↓absorption.
- Motility: Metoclopramide ↑, anticholinergics ↓.
- Gut flora: Antibiotics ↓OCP/digoxin efficacy.
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Distribution (D):
- Protein binding: Aspirin displaces warfarin → ↑free warfarin, ↑bleed risk.
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Metabolism (M): (Mainly Cytochrome P450)
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Induction: ↑Metabolism → ↓drug effect (e.g., Rifampicin + OCPs → OCP failure).
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Inhibition: ↓Metabolism → ↑drug toxicity (e.g., Erythromycin + Warfarin → ↑bleeding).
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CYP450 Enzyme Interactions:
Enzyme Inducers (📌 G P S C R I B S Cell Phone) Inhibitors (📌 SICKFACES.COM Group + Grapefruit) Key Substrates (Examples) CYP3A4 Carbamazepine, Rifampicin, Phenytoin, St. John's Wort Macrolides, Azoles, Ritonavir, Grapefruit Juice Statins (Simva), Ca-blockers, Warfarin, Cyclosporine CYP2D6 (Few potent) SSRIs (Fluoxetine), Quinidine, Bupropion β-blockers (Metoprolol), Codeine, TCAs CYP2C9 Rifampicin, Barbiturates Fluconazole, Amiodarone, Sulfamethoxazole Warfarin (S), Phenytoin, NSAIDs CYP2C19 Rifampicin, Carbamazepine Omeprazole, Fluconazole Clopidogrel (prodrug), Diazepam CYP1A2 Smoking, Char-meat Ciprofloxacin, Fluvoxamine Theophylline, Caffeine
⭐ Grapefruit juice (CYP3A4 inhibitor) ↑levels of nifedipine, simvastatin, cyclosporine.
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Excretion (E):
- Urinary pH: $NaHCO_3$ ↑aspirin excretion; $NH_4Cl$ ↑amphetamine excretion.
- Tubular secretion: Probenecid ↓penicillin excretion (↑effect), ↑MTX toxicity.
Pharmacodynamic (PD) Interactions - Receptor Riot
- Drugs clash at receptors or common pathways, altering patient response. Plasma levels unaffected.
- Synergism: Enhanced combined effect.
- Additive ($1+1=2$): e.g., Aspirin + Paracetamol.
- Potentiation ($1+1>2$): e.g., Levodopa + Carbidopa (Carbidopa inhibits peripheral metabolism of Levodopa, ↑ CNS availability). 📌 Synergy Potentiates Action (SPA).
- Antagonism: One drug blocks or reduces another's effect.
- Physiological (Functional): Opposite actions via different receptors (e.g., Histamine vs Adrenaline on bronchi).
- Receptor Blockade:
- Competitive: Reversible binding to agonist site. Shifts Dose-Response Curve (DRC) right (↓potency, $E_{max}$ unchanged). (e.g., Naloxone vs Morphine).
- Non-competitive: Irreversible or allosteric binding. ↓ $E_{max}$ (↓efficacy). (e.g., Phenoxybenzamine vs Noradrenaline).
⭐ Naloxone competitively antagonizes Morphine at opioid receptors, reversing respiratory depression without affecting Morphine's $E_{max}$ if sufficient agonist is present.

Clinically Significant Interactions - Danger Duos
- Warfarin (NTI):
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- Amiodarone, Macrolides, Azoles (inhibitors) → ↑INR, ↑Bleeding.
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- Rifampicin, Carbamazepine (inducers) → ↓INR, ↑Clots.
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- Digoxin (NTI):
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- Diuretics ($K^+\downarrow$), Amiodarone, Verapamil → ↑Digoxin toxicity.
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- Lithium (NTI):
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- NSAIDs, Thiazides, ACEIs → ↑Lithium toxicity.
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- Statins + Macrolides/Azoles/Fibrates → ↑Rhabdomyolysis risk.
- Serotonin Syndrome: MAOIs + SSRIs/SNRIs/Tramadol → Hyperthermia, rigidity. 📌 SHIVERS.
- QT Prolongation: Macrolides + Azoles + Class IA/III Antiarrhythmics → ↑Torsades de Pointes.
- Sildenafil + Nitrates → Severe hypotension ⚠️.
⭐ Grapefruit juice (CYP3A4 inhibitor) ↑ levels of Statins, calcium channel blockers, Cyclosporine.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Pharmacokinetic interactions alter ADME (Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion); pharmacodynamic interactions alter drug action/effect.
- Enzyme induction (e.g., Rifampicin, Phenytoin) ↓ drug levels, reducing efficacy.
- Enzyme inhibition (e.g., Ketoconazole, Erythromycin) ↑ drug levels, increasing toxicity.
- Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes are key in metabolic drug interactions.
- Grapefruit juice inhibits CYP3A4, significantly ↑ levels of susceptible drugs.
- Warfarin has critical interactions, notably with antibiotics, antifungals, and NSAIDs.
- Risk of serotonin syndrome with multiple serotonergic drugs; risk of Torsades de Pointes with multiple QT-prolonging drugs.
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