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pharmacology Medical Science Seminar Mrs Leonardi What is a drug? “A substance used as a medicine for the treatment of disease.” “A chemical agent that is used in treatment, cure, prevention, and diagnosis of a disease.” However, many other substances can be classified as drugs, even though they are not commonly associated with disease (caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, cocaine, heroin, etc.). “Any chemical agent other than food that affects living organisms by altering physiological processes.” What is Pharmacology? The science of drugs (From the Greek words: pharmakos, medicine or drug; and logos, study). “The science that deals with the study of the mechanism of action, uses, adverse effects and fate of drugs in animals and humans” “Pharmacology is concerned with the changes in function, structure and chemical properties of the body brought about by chemical substances” Sir W. Patton (1986) What do pharmacologists study? the mechanisms responsible for drug tolerance and addiction. the molecular targets for drugs and how they produce their effects. the mechanisms responsible for drug-resistance in cancer cells, microorganisms and parasites. how drugs can be used to prevent conditions such as cancer, heart disease and neurodegeneration. how the body terminates the action of a drug. the toxic effects of herbicides and pesticides. the effect of chemical agents on subcellular mechanisms. the use of drugs as tools to investigate cellular function and many other things. Pharmacology: Its subdivisions . , Pharmacotherapeutics- the study of the effects of chemical agents of therapeutic or diagnostic value used in prevention, cure, diagnosis or treatment of disease. Toxicology- the study of the effects of chemical agents with potential for toxicity on biological systems. The study of pharmacotherapeutics and toxicology includes two closely associated areas: pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics. Pharmacodynamics--What a drug does to the body. Pharmacodynamics is the study of the molecular, biochemical, and physiological effects of drugs on cellular systems and their mechanisms of action. Simply put: What a drug does to the body; Receptor interactions, dose/response and mechanisms of therapeutic and toxic action. Response vs Time When you study pharmacodynamics you study: Effects produced by the drug Depressing- anesthetics used in surgical procedures Stimulating-amphetamines used in the treatment of narcolepsy Destroying-aspirin used to destroy prostaglandin synthetase thus preventing inflammation Replacing-growth hormone used to treat children of short stature When you study pharmacodynamics you study: Mechanism of Action Example: nicotinic acetylcholine Mechanism of Action of Chantix Bound nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are associated with excitation of neurons. Dopamine is produced as a result of these bound receptors. Dopamine is associated with the pleasure center of the brain. Nicotine competitively binds these receptors. Mechanism of Action of Chantix When you study pharmacodynamics you study: Sites of action of the drug “Anesthesia awareness” EEG monitors cerebral cortex Local (could be topical), Regional (ex. epidural), and General anesthetics (can not be aroused by pain) When you study pharmacodynamics you study: Dose /Effect relationship Half maximal effective concentration (EC50) refers to the concentration of a drug which induces a response halfway between the baseline and maximum. When you study pharmacodynamics you study: Safety of the drug Pesticide usage Pesticides 1973 1947 Pharmacokinetics--What the body does to a drug. Pharmacokinetics deals with ADME -the absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of drugs. Simply put: What the body does to a drug. (rate quantification brings mathematical component ADME Absorption Distribution Metabolism Elimination Caffeine is a psychoactive stimulant Absorption and Distribution- Caffeine is completely absorbed by the stomach and small intestine within 45 minutes of ingestion In healthy adults, caffeine's half-life is approximately 3–4 hours and in infants and young children, the half-life may be longer than in adults; half-life in a newborn baby may be as long as 30 hours. Metabolism- Caffeine Caffeine is metabolized in the liver into three primary metabolites: paraxanthine (84%), theobromine (12%), and theophylline (4%) . Pharmacodynamics of metabolized caffeine Paraxanthine (84%): Has the effect of increasing lipolysis, leading to elevated glycerol and free fatty acid levels in the blood plasma. Theobromine (12%): Dilates blood vessels and increases urine volume. Theobromine is also the principal alkaloid in cocoa, and therefore chocolate. Theophylline (4%): Relaxes smooth muslescof the bronchi, and is used to treat asthma. The therapeutic dose of theophylline, however, is many times greater than the levels attained from caffeine metabolism. Elimination- Caffeine Caffeine is metabolized in the liver and eliminated in the urine. Another example: Orlistat is a reversible inhibitor of lipases. Also known as Alli. Binds the lipase and renders it inactive. Pharmacotherapeutics the study of the effects of chemical agents of therapeutic or diagnostic value used in prevention, cure, diagnosis or treatment of disease. You must study their pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics. StudentConsult (on 21 December 2005 05:34 PM) © 2005 Elsevier Toxicology- the study of the effects of chemical agents with potential for toxicity on biological systems. •Toxicology is the study of the adverse effects of chemicals on living organisms. It is the study of symptoms, mechanisms, treatments and detection of poisoning •Toxicology studies the relationship between dose and its effects on the living organism. The chief criterion regarding the toxicity of a chemical is the dose, the amount of exposure to the substance. •You must study the pharmacodynamics and the pharmacokinetics of the chemical. History of Toxicology Paracelsus, (1493-1541), the father of modern toxicology, said “All things are poison and nothing is without poison; Only dose makes the poison”. Paracelsus was the first person to explain the doseresponse relationship of toxic substances. Discoveries were being made in toxicology throughout the 1700s and 1800s. www.toxipedia.org Even a benign substance like water can cause harm in excessive amounts. Dose-Response-Pharmacodynamics The Hormetic Dose-Response Curve PHARMACY Often confused with pharmacology, pharmacy is a separate discipline in the health sciences. It is the profession responsible for the preparation, dispensing, and appropriate use of medication, and provides services to achieve optimal therapeutic outcomes. History of Pharmacology Ancient times Shamanism / ethnobotany Primitive humans identified edible and poisonous plants and animals that were used for appetite suppressants, stimulants and psychedelics. Physicians used extracts from plants and animals as therapeutic agents. Opium has been in use for at least 5000 years. Cocaine (not in pure form) for 2000 years, appetite suppressant. Egypt and Babylonia 1600 B.C. : papyrus listing and characterizing 700 diseases. The Egyptians used to develop remedies for disease, sources, nature and preparation of drugs. They transmitted the foundations of medicine to India and Greece. India Sushruta (500 B.C.) Hindu physician: 1st aseptic surgery, 1st skin graft, 1st vaccination against a disease similar to smallpox. He described 1100 diseases. All this unknown in Europe for 2000 years. Claudius Galen (129-200A.D.) Both theory and practical experience contributed to pharmacology. Paracelsus (1493-1541) United chemistry with medicine; discarded theories of the causes of disease; advocated that illness is a derangement of body chemistry to be treated by simple chemical therapeutic agents. William Harvey (1578-1657) Explained circulation of blood; this discovery signaled the beginning of study in medical sciences. Johann Jakob Wepfer (1620-1695) Used animal experimentation to study pharmacology. Claude Bernard (1813- 1878) First to demonstrate and explain how a drug produces its action in the body Oswald Schmiedeberg (1838-1921) Founded the first journal of pharmacology. Paul Elrich (1854-1915) Ushered in era of chemotherapy, formulated concept of receptors ( part of chemical components of living tissue with which a drug combines to produce effects) John Jacob Abel (1857-1938) Father of American Pharmacology; First full time professor of pharmacology • ADDITIONAL SLIDES Distribution and Elimination Pharmacokinetics Chantix (varenicline) Absorption/Distribution Maximum plasma concentrations of varenicline occur typically within 3-4 hours after oral administration. Following administration of multiple oral doses of varenicline, steady-state conditions were reached within 4 days. Metabolism/Elimination The elimination half-life of varenicline is approximately 24 hours. Varenicline undergoes minimal metabolism with 92% excreted unchanged in the urine.