How Your Body Absorbs Medication
From the moment you swallow a pill to the point it reaches your bloodstream, your body runs a complex absorption process. This guide explains bioavailability, first-pass metabolism, and why the route of administration matters.
The Journey of a Pill
When you swallow a tablet, it doesn't go directly to where the pain is or immediately enter your bloodstream. Instead, it takes a carefully choreographed journey through your digestive system before the active ingredientActive Ingredient The component of a drug product that produces the intended therapeutic effect. The active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) is what the drug does — everything else in the formulation (binders, fillers,
The tablet first dissolves in the stomach. The active ingredient is then absorbed mostly through the wall of the small intestine, where a vast network of capillaries carries it into the portal vein — a blood vessel leading directly to the liver. The liver processes (metabolizes) much of the drug before it ever reaches the rest of the body. What remains after this first pass through the liver enters the general circulation and travels to its target tissues.
This entire process — from swallowing to the drug reaching the target — can take anywhere from 20 minutes to over an hour, depending on the drug and whether you've eaten recently.
bioavailabilityBioavailabilityThe fraction of an administered drug dose that reaches systemic circulation in unchanged form. IntravenousIntravenousA route of drug administration where medication is delivered directly into a vein, providing immediate and complete bioavailability. IV administration allows precise dosing control and is used when ra
drugs have 100% bioavailability by definition, while oral drugs are typically lower due to in
">What Is Bioavailability?
A route of drug administration where medication is delivered directly into a vein, providing immediate and complete bioavailability. IV administration allows precise dosing control and is used when ra
drugs have 100% bioavailability by definition, while oral drugs are typically lower due to inBioavailability is the fraction of a drug dose that actually reaches the bloodstream in an active form. It's expressed as a percentage.
If you inject a drug directly into a vein (intravenous, or IV), 100% of the dose reaches the bloodstream — that's the gold standard. But when you swallow a tablet, some of the drug is broken down in the gut wall and liver before it can circulate. A drug with 60% oral bioavailability means that 60% of the dose you swallow actually becomes active in your body; the other 40% is lost to metabolism before it can work.
Bioavailability matters for dosing. A drug with low bioavailability requires a larger oral dose to achieve the same effect as a smaller IV dose. This is why nitroglycerin tablets (used for chest pain) are placed under the tongue rather than swallowed — sublingualSublingual A route of drug administration where the medication is placed under the tongue, allowing absorption through the highly vascular sublingual mucosa directly into the bloodstream. This bypasses first-pas
First-Pass Metabolism
The liver is the body's primary detoxification center. When blood from the intestines passes through it via the portal vein, the liver enzymes — especially the cytochrome P450Cytochrome P450 A superfamily of liver enzymes responsible for metabolizing approximately 75% of all drugs. Key isoforms include CYP3A4 (metabolizes ~50% of drugs), CYP2D6, CYP2C9, and CYP1A2. Drugs that inhibit or i The phenomenon where an orally administered drug is significantly metabolized by the liver before reaching systemic circulation. This reduces the amount of active drug available to the body and is a m
Some drugs are so extensively metabolized on this first pass that very little active drug survives. Nitroglycerin, morphine, and testosterone all have very high first-pass metabolism when taken orally — which is why they're often delivered by alternative routes (sublingual, injection, or patches).
Other drugs are actually designed to exploit first-pass metabolism. These are called prodrugs: they're inactive when swallowed, but the liver's enzymes convert them into their active form. Codeine, for example, is converted to morphine in the liver. If someone's liver enzymes work unusually fast or slow (due to genetics), their response to codeine can be dramatically different from an average patient.
Routes of Administration
Different delivery routes bypass different parts of the absorption process:
| Route | Where Absorbed | Approximate Onset | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oral (swallowed) | Small intestine | 30–90 min | Subject to first-pass effect |
| Sublingual (under tongue) | Oral mucosa | 2–5 min | Bypasses liver |
| Transdermal (patch) | Skin | Hours | Slow, sustained release |
| Inhalation | Lungs | Seconds | Fast; used in asthma, anesthesia |
| Intravenous (IV) | Direct to blood | Immediate | 100% bioavailability |
| IntramuscularIntramuscular A route of drug administration where medication is injected into muscle tissue, providing relatively rapid absorption through the muscle's blood supply. IM injections can deliver both immediate-acting (IM) |
Muscle tissue | 15–30 min | Bypasses gut; some first-pass |
| Rectal (suppository) | Rectum | 15–60 min | Partially bypasses liver |
Choosing the right route isn't just about speed — it also determines how long the drug's effect lasts, how the drug is distributed through the body, and how predictable the dosing is.
Factors That Affect Absorption
Even for the same drug and the same route, absorption can vary between people and situations:
Food and stomach contents. Some drugs absorb better on an empty stomach; others need food to reduce irritation or improve solubility. Fat-soluble drugs (like certain antiretrovirals) absorb much better with a fatty meal.
Stomach acid and motility. Conditions like achlorhydria (low stomach acid) or gastroparesis (slow gastric emptying) can dramatically alter how a drug is absorbed.
Age. Older adults typically have reduced gut motility and altered liver enzyme activity, which can change both the speed and amount of drug absorbed.
Genetics. Variations in the CYP2D6 and CYP3A4 enzyme genes mean some people metabolize certain drugs dramatically faster or slower than average. This is the basis of pharmacogenomics testing.
Other drugs. Some medications alter the function of gut transporters or liver enzymes, changing how much of a second drug is absorbed. Grapefruit juice, famously, blocks a gut enzyme (CYP3A4) that normally breaks down several common medications, causing higher-than-expected drug levels.
Formulation. A tablet, capsule, liquid, or extended-release formulation of the same drug can produce quite different absorption profiles even though the active ingredient is identical.
Key Takeaways
- Bioavailability measures what fraction of a drug dose actually reaches your bloodstream in active form.
- The first-pass effect means the liver breaks down a significant portion of many oral drugs before they can circulate.
- The route of administration — oral, sublingual, patch, injection — determines how fast and how completely a drug is absorbed.
- Food, age, genetics, and other drugs can all alter how much medication your body actually absorbs.
- When a drug needs to work quickly or has very low oral bioavailability, doctors choose alternative delivery routes to ensure it works effectively.