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Introduction to Pharmacology

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Pharmacology"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Pharmacology
Course Coordinator Jamaluddin Shaikh, Ph.D. School of Pharmacy, University of Nizwa Lecture-1 September 17, 2011

2 What is Pharmacology? Study of how drugs function inside the body
Composition Use Effects

3 What is Drug? Chemical substance
Used in the treatment, cure and diagnosis of diseases

4 Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
Pharmacokinetics (PK) : Effects of body on the drugs Absorption Distribution Metabolism Excretion Pharmacodynamics (PD): Effects of the drugs on body

5 Bound Free Free Bound ABSORPTION Free Drug EXCRETION Bound Drug
LOCUS OF ACTION “RECEPTORS” TISSUE RESERVOIRS Bound Free Free Bound ABSORPTION Free Drug EXCRETION SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION Bound Drug BIOTRANSFORMATION

6 PK vs PD Dose Site of action Plasma Concentration Effects PK PD

7 How Do Drugs Work? Work by interact with endogenous protein
Some antagonize, block or inhibit endogenous proteins Some activate endogenous proteins A few endogenous proteins have unconventional mechanisms of action

8 Receptor Macromolecular endogenous protein
Primarily located on the plasma membrane It binds the drugs and initiates its effects

9 Ligand Molecules that bind to receptor is called ligand
A ligand may be Peptides Neurotransmitters Hormones Drugs

10 Drug-Receptor Binding
Drug-receptor interaction produce pharmacological response Pharmacological response depends on: Nature of the drug No. of receptors Amount of drug at the receptor site

11 Agonist and its Action Chemical binds to a receptor of a cell
Triggers a response by the cell Can be endogenous or exogenous Types of agonists Full agonist Partial agonist Inverse agonist

12 Antagonist and its Action
Binds to receptor but produce no biological response Blocks the agonist mediated effects Interactions are reversible or irreversible Can compete with endogenous ligands

13 Agonists vs Antagonist
Receptor Effect No Effect

14 How Do Agonist Interacts with Receptors?
Extracellular Compartment Unbound Endogenous Activator (Agonist) Cell Membrane Inactive Receptor Intracellular Compartment

15 How Do Agonist Interact With Receptors?
Extracellular Compartment Bound Endogenous Activator (Agonist) Cell Membrane Active Receptor Intracellular Compartment Cellular Response

16 How Do Agonist Drugs Produce Cellular Activity
Displaced Endogenous Activator ( Agonist) Extracellular Compartment Bound Agonist of Receptor (Drug) Cell Membrane Active Receptor Intracellular Compartment Cellular Response

17 How Do Drugs Work by Antagonizing Receptors?
Displaced Endogenous Activator ( Agonist) Extracellular Compartment Bound Antagonist of Receptor (Drug) Cell Membrane Inactive Receptor Intracellular Compartment

18 Two Drugs Given Together: Different Effects
Work independently and produce own effects May produce similar effects Addition Synergism Potentiation May produce opposite effects Competitive antagonism Non-competitive antagonism Chemical antagonism Functional or physiological antagonism

19 Competitive Antagonism
Common drug antagonism Antagonist competes with agonists for same receptors Pharmacological effects depends on the concentration of either agonists or antagonists Antagonism may be reversible or irreversible Reversible: loose binding Example: antihistamines, β-blocker Irreversible: covalent bonding Example: phenoxybenzamine

20 Non-competitive Antagonism
Antagonists and agonists bind to the different sites

21 Competitive vs Non-competitive Antagonism
Antagonist Antagonist Agonist Agonist Antagonist Competitive Antagonism Binds same site Chemical similarity Maximum response with increasing dose of agonist Non-competitive Antagonism Binds different site No chemical similarity Maximum response with increasing dose of agonist

22 Chemical Antagonism Involves a direct interaction between an agonist and antagonist in such a way that the effect of agonist is lost

23 Physiological Antagonism
A form of antagonism which occurs when two drugs, each tends to oppose or cancel the effects of other


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