请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 pharmacokinetics
释义

pharmacokinetics


phar·ma·co·ki·net·ics

P0235700 (fär′mə-kō-kə-nĕt′ĭks, -kī-)n. (used with a sing. verb)1. The process by which a drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and eliminated by the body.2. The study of this process.
phar′ma·co·ki·net′ic adj.

pharmacokinetics

(ˌfɑːməkəʊkɪˈnɛtɪks; -kaɪ-) n (Pharmacology) the branch of pharmacology concerned with the way drugs are taken into, move around, and are eliminated from, the body ˌpharmacokiˈnetic adj ˌpharmacokiˈnetically adv pharmacokineticist n

phar•ma•co•ki•net•ics

(ˌfɑr mə koʊ kɪˈnɛt ɪks, -kaɪ-)

n. (used with a pl. v.) the actions of drugs within the body, as their absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination. [1955–60]
Thesaurus
Noun1.pharmacokinetics - the study of the action of drugs in the body: method and rate of excretion; duration of effect; etc.materia medica, pharmacological medicine, pharmacology - the science or study of drugs: their preparation and properties and uses and effects
Translations

pharmacokinetics


pharmacokinetics

[¦fär·mə·kō·ki′ned·iks] (pharmacology) The study of the way that drugs move through the body after they are swallowed or injected.

pharmacokinetics


pharmacokinetics

 [fahr″mah-ko-kĭ-net´iks] the study of the movement of drugs in the body, including the processes of absorption, distribution, localization in tissues, biotransformation, and excretion. adj., adj pharmacokinet´ic.

phar·ma·co·ki·net·ics

(far'mă-kō-ki-net'iks), Movements of drugs within biologic systems, as affected by uptake, distribution, binding, elimination, and biotransformation; particularly the rates of such movements. [pharmaco- + G. kinēsis, movement]

pharmacokinetics

(fär′mə-kō-kə-nĕt′ĭks, -kī-)n. (used with a sing. verb)1. The process by which a drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and eliminated by the body.2. The study of this process.
phar′ma·co·ki·net′ic adj.

pharmacokinetics

(1) The formal study of the processes of absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion (ADME) of medicinal products.
(2) The processes of absorption, distribution, biotransformation and metabolism, binding and elimination/excretion of a drug or vaccine, which corresponds to the movement of a therapeutic though a biological system, as related to the rates at which these events occur.

therapeutic drug monitoring

Clinical pharmacology The regular measurement of serum levels of drugs requiring close 'titration' of doses in order to ensure that there are sufficient levels in the blood to be therapeutically effective, while avoiding potentially toxic excess; drug concentration in vivo is a function of multiple factors Common TDM drugs Carbamazepine, digoxin, gentamycin, procainamide, phenobarbital, phenytoin, theophylline, tobramycin, valproic acid, vancomycin Therapeutic drug levels in vivo–factors involved Patient compliance Ingestion of drug in the doses prescribed Bioavailability Access to circulation, interaction with cognate receptor(s); ionized and 'free', or bound to a carrier molecule, often albumin Pharmacokinetics Drug equilibrium requires 4-6 half-lives of drug clearance (a period of time for1/2 of the drug to 'clear', either through metabolism or excretion, multiplied by 4-6); the drug is affected by Interaction with foods or other drugs at the site of absorption, eg tetracycline binding to cations or chelation with binding resins, eg bile acid-binding cholestyramine that also sequesters warfarin, thyroxine and digitoxin or interactions of various drugs with each other, eg digitalis with quinidine resulting in a 3-fold ↓ in digitalis clearance Absorption may be changed by GI hypermotility or large molecule size Lipid solubility, which affects the volume of distribution; highly lipid-soluble substances have high affinity for adipose tissue and a low tendency to remain in the vascular compartment, see Volume of distribution. Biotransformation, with 'first pass' elimination by hepatic metabolism, in which polar groups are introduced into relatively insoluble molecules by oxidation, reduction or hydrolysis; for elimination, lipid-soluble drugs require the 'solubility' steps of glucuronidation or sulfatation in the liver; water-soluble molecules are eliminated directly via the kidneys, weak acidic drugs are eliminated by active tubular secretion that may be altered by therapy with methotrexate, penicillin, probenecid, salicylates, phenylbutazone and thiazide diuretics First order kinetics Drug elimination is proportional to its concentration Zero order kinetics Drug elimination is independent of the drug's concentration Physiological factors Age Lower doses are required in both infants and the elderly, in the former because the metabolic machinery is not fully operational, in the latter because the machinery is decaying, with ↓ cardiac and renal function, enzyme activity, density of receptors on the cell surfaces and ↓ albumin, the major drug transporting molecule Enzyme induction, which is involved in a drug's metabolism may reduce the drug's activity; enzyme-inducing drugs include barbiturates, carbamazepine, glutethimide, phenytoin, primidone, rifampicin Enzyme inhibition, which is involved in drug metabolism, resulting in ↑ drug activity, prolonging the action of various drugs, including chloramphenicol, cimetidine, disulfiram (Antabuse), isoniazid, methyldopa, metronidazole, phenylbutazone and sulfonamides Genetic factors play an as yet poorly defined role in therapeutic drug monitoring, as is the case of the poor ability of some racial groups to acetylate drugs Concomitant disease, ie whether there are underlying conditions that may affect drug distribution or metabolism, eg renal disease with ↓ clearance and ↑ drug levels, or hepatic disease, in which there is ↓ albumin production and ↓ enzyme activity resulting in a functional ↑ in drug levels, due to ↓ availability of drug-carrying proteins

phar·ma·co·ki·net·ics

(fahr'mă-kō-ki-net'iks) Study of the movement of drugs within biologic systems, as affected by absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion; particularly the rates of such movements. [pharmaco- + G. kinēsis, movement]

pharmacokinetics

The study of how DRUGS are absorbed into, distributed and broken down in, and excreted from, the body.

phar·ma·co·ki·net·ics

(fahr'mă-kō-ki-net'iks) Movements of drugs within biologic systems; particularly rates of such movements. [pharmaco- + G. kinēsis, movement]
AcronymsSeepumpkin

pharmacokinetics


  • noun

Words related to pharmacokinetics

noun the study of the action of drugs in the body: method and rate of excretion

Related Words

  • materia medica
  • pharmacological medicine
  • pharmacology
随便看

 

英语词典包含2567994条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/31 15:44:17