Pharmacology 2060A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Pharmacodynamics, Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacotherapy

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We choose the drug and dose that are therapeutically effective with the fewest side effects. Health care professionals often titrate the dose of a drug. The complex is then able to produce a biological effect: drugs typically mimic an endogenous compound in the body. For example, norepinephrine binds to receptors in the heart and increases heart rate. There are drugs that mimic the action of norepinephrine by binding to the same type of receptor: when the drug leaves, the action stop, do all drugs act on cellular targets, no! Dna: increases transcription of different genes, when the ligand/receptor complex binds to. Dna, transcription of messenger rna is stimulated: protein synthesis occurs hours or days later, ligands to these receptors are typically highly lipid soluble. Endogenous examples include the steroid hormones testosterone and estrogen. Note: in the animation for this lecture, the drug should bind the receptor and.

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