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Review of the application of Kirchhoff's Laws of series and parallel flows to pharmacology: Defining organ clearance

Abstract

Dosing rate decisions for drugs and changes in dosing in a patient due to disease states, drug interactions and pharmacogenomics are all based on clearance, a measure of the body's ability to eliminate drug. The primary organs of elimination are the liver and the kidney. Clearance for each of these organs is a summative composition of biologic processes. In 1857, Gustav Kirchhoff first developed his laws to describe the "motion of electricity in conductors... [and] ...in wires", recognizing that summative processes occur either in parallel or in series. Since then, Kirchhoff's Laws have also been applied to heat transfer, diffusion and drag force on falling objects, but not to pharmacology. Although not previously recognized, renal clearance always follow Kirchhoff's Laws, as does hepatic clearance for drugs where basolateral transporters are not clinically relevant. However, when basolateral transporters are clinically relevant, we demonstrate that the present accepted approach is inconsistent with recognized drug disposition processes. However, this clearance relationship can be easily corrected using Kirchhoff's Laws. The purpose of this review is to demonstrate that Kirchhoff's Laws, which define how to approach rate processes that occur in parallel versus processes that occur in series, can be applicable to pharmacology in addition to the over 160-year recognition of their use in physical sciences. We anticipate that the application to clearance will be only the first of many such pharmacological analyses.

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