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

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Module 6 pharmacokinetics time course of drug action. The underlying principle of clinical pharmacokinetics is that a relationship exists between the effects of a drug and the concentration of drug in the body: higher the concentration = greater effect. In clinical pharmacokinetics we try to provide: 1) a quantitative relationship between drug dose (concentration) and effect, 2) a framework to interpret measurements of drug concentrations in biological fluids to benefit patient drug therapy. Ideally drug concentrations would be measured from the site of action. In reality, this is not feasible: this would be the most important place to know how much drug is there. In reality drug concentrations are usually measured in plasma. Can take a blood sample to determine how much is there. Drugs in plasma exist as bound to plasma proteins or free state. It is only free drug that is able to get to target to elicit a pharmacological response.

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