Pharmacology 2060A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Tachyphylaxis, Intrinsic Activity, Partial Agonist

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We learned that most drugs work by binding to receptors. There are two receptors theories that we use to describe drug receptor interactions: the simple occupancy theory, the modified occupancy theory, the simple occupancy theory. The intensity of a drug"s response is proportional to the number of receptors occupied. The modified occupancy theory ids that some characteristics of drug receptor interactions cannot be accounted for by the simple occupancy theory. The intensity of a drugs response is proportional to the number of receptors occupied. Two drugs occupying the same receptor can have different binding strengths (i. e. affinity) Affinity is the attraction that a drug has for its receptor. Drugs with a high affinity are highly attracted to their receptor and therefore bind to the receptor effectively even at a low concentration. Drugs with low affinity are weakly attracted to their receptor and therefore bind ineffectively to the receptor even at high concentration.

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