Utilisateur
Drugs that are created and have to be ingested/administered.
Drugs that already exist within the body.
Isomers that differ in the spatial arrangement of atoms.
Molecules with the same molecular formulas, but different arrangement of atoms.
Molecules that exist in two mirror-image forms, but cannot be cannot be superimposed.
Cannot be placed on top of one another.
Easy administration
Reaches target at sufficient concentration
Therapeutic effects outweigh toxic effects
Few side effects
The therapeutic or toxic action dependant on the concentration of a drug at site of action.
A molecule that irreversibly binds to a receptor.
Drugs that activate a biological response once bound to a recpetor.
Molecules that bind to a receptor to prevent the effect of an agonist.
The measure of tightness of drug binding to receptors.
The measure of a drugs ability to generate an effect.
Law of Mass Action
Proportional to the concentration of reactants.
Occupancy: fraction of target occupied by drug
Maximal occupancy: maximal fraction that can be occupied by drug as drug concentration reaches saturation
[Drug]: molar concentration of drug
Kd: concentration of drug that leads to 50% occupancy of target
Agonsists that elicit a maximal biological response.
Agonists that activate receptors but are unable to elicit a maximal response.
Absorption
Distribution
Metabolism
Excretion
Toxicity
Epicutaneous (skin)
Inhalation
Eyedrops
Orally
Gastric tube
Rectally
Intravenous (IV)
Subcutaneous
Intramuscular