The Older Aged Patients
In patients over 65 years of age, the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion are altered, putting them at risk of developing toxic reactions. Therefore, make dosage adjustments while giving them drugs, especially the narrow therapeutic index drugs.
The reasons for a delay in the pharmacokinetic profile in the elderly are as follows:
- They have diminished gastrointestinal motility and blood flow, delaying absorption.
- Their altered body fat percentage, lean muscle mass, and total body water alter distribution.
- If they have decreased plasma protein due to malnourishment or cachexia, distribution alters. It happens because this allows a larger proportion of free or unbound drugs to circulate and exert toxic drug reactions.
- Their diminished hepatic function can lead to slowed metabolism, and altered renal function affects excretion.
When prescribing drugs to older people, give the lowest possible dose and titrate accordingly. Monitor them closely for any adverse drug events.
Another concern in the older population is polypharmacy because often, they receive different medications for various conditions that puts them at risk of drug interactions even more. One drug can potentiate the effect of another drug, leading to drug-drug interaction.
In general, doses of most medications, especially digoxin, sedatives, hypnotics, anticoagulants, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents, antibiotics, and antihypertensives, should be given in low doses in the older population to prevent adverse drug events.