Pharmacology 2060A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Therapeutic Drug Monitoring, Therapeutic Index, Pharmacokinetics

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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. Ideally, drug concentrations would be measured from the site of action. In reality, this is not feasible: let"s take the example of drugs used to treat schizophrenia. These drugs act in the brain: clearly taking a sample from a patient"s brain to measure drug concentrations is invasive and would likely do more harm than good. In reality, drug concentrations are usually measured in plasma: plasma is the ideal site to measure drug concentrations, plasma is a good site to measure drug concentrations because, it is relatively non-invasive. So we don"t have to take a piece of persons brain to measure that schizophrenic drug and can rather just look at blood sample to see how much drug is there.

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