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Pharmacology Ch. 4 Pharmacy Tech. Ch. 10+11
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A receptor (the “Key”) interacts with a drug because it fits the structure of the receptor. Once the drug reaches the receptor it is allowed into the cell where it cares out its function Example: antihistamines Some drugs interact with more than one receptor Example: diphenhydramine- works with histamine receptors and with acetylcholine. *blocks histamine and causes drowsiness
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The place where a drug causes an effect to occur Goal is to get the right drug, right amount, the right site of action and the right time for a desired effect. Classic example: aspirin. - Aspirin’s site of action is the hypothalamus( a structure in the brain that regulates body temperature).
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How a drug works and produces its effects
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The lock into which the drug molecule fits as the key The cellular material located at the site of action that interacts with the drug Once the drug develops a bond, there are specific molecular changes that can occur
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Agonist- a drug that produces a predicted action, when bided to the correct receptor. 2 main properties: affinity-binding to the cell receptor structure efficacious- how well the drug does what it is designed to do Antagonist- bind to a specific site on the cell to prevent the action of another substance. This, in-turn, produces the desired effect. Target cell-large number of similar cells, such as a nerve cell
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*The response of a drug is directly related to the amount of the drug taken or given.
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The point that represents the maximal response is called the ceiling. Beyond the ceiling, the drug becomes toxic. Once maximal response is achieved adding more drug will not be of benefit.
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Potency- the measurement of the strength of the drug that us required to have a specific effect on the body -ED50- measurement of the amount of specific drug that will achieve ½ of the maximal response. Drugs are tested on for their maximum effect(dangerous!), but just that they work.
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