Pharmacology 2060A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Pharmacokinetics, Bioavailability, Circulatory System

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Module 6: clinical pharmacokinetics time course of drug action. Clinical pharmacokinetics: the relationship between the effects of a drug and the concentration of drug in the body. Ideally drug concentrations would be measured from the site of action but this is not possible: drug concentrations are usually measured in plasma; this is a good site because: It is relatively non-invasive: for most drugs, there is a good correlation between plasma concentration and therapeutic and toxic drug effects. Free vs. total plasma drug concentration: drugs in plasma are either bound to plasma proteins or free (free drugs is what elicits a pharmacological response, measuring free drug concentration is difficult so total concentration is measured. Cmax: the rate of absorption < the rate of drug elimination; plasma drugs concentrations decrease. Characteristics of plasma concentration time curves: plasma drug concentrations must be high enough to have a therapeutic effect but not so high as to induce toxicity.

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