New trends in pharmacokinetics

Author(s)

    • NATO Advanced Study Institute on New Trends in Pharmacokinetics
    • Thakur, Ajit K.
    • North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Scientific Affairs Division

Bibliographic Information

New trends in pharmacokinetics

edited by Aldo Rescigno and Ajit K. Thakur

(NATO ASI series, ser. A . Life sciences ; v. 221)

Plenum Press, c1991

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Published in cooperation with NATO Scientific Affairs Division.

"Prodeedings of a NATO Advanced Study Institute on New Trends in Pharmacokinetics, held September 4-15, 1990, in Erice, Sicily, Italy"--t.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The last decade or so has witnessed tremendous progress in methodology in the field of drug development in general and pharmacokinetics in particular. Clinical pharmacokinetics is using new tools for probing into the "black box" once being ac- cessible only partly through experimental techniques and, mostly through mathemati- cal and computer means. Development of computerized scanning, positron emission tomography (PET), stereoselectivity and other techniques are now enabling investi- gators to have better pictures of the systems they are studying. Mathematical models through computer simulation and statistical estimation, mostly due to easy access be- cause of inexpensive yet powerful personal computers, are enabling us to investigate ultrastructures and their functional connectivity in more detail. As a consequence, new hypotheses are being formed and tested in various related fields. In clinical pharmacokinetics, mostly due to mathematical modeling, more accurate interspecies scaling of pharmacokinetic parameters and dosimetry can be done now-a-days. The concept of "a human is a bigger rat" does not necessarily fly as a consequence. Pharmacokinetic concepts are becoming powerful tools in meaningful carcinogenic and toxic risk extrapolation of different chemicals in humans. New dose delivery designs are being formulated using pharmacokinetic techniques for different pharmaceutical compounds. Investigations continue in the academia, research institutions, pharmaceutical, biotechnological, and agricultural industries in developmental and physiological aspects of different chemicals for the benefit of mankind. The idea of a school on "New Trends in Pharmacokinetics", from which the present pUblication was made possible, took shape over almost a year.

Table of Contents

  • Pharmacokinetics: Unfolding of a Concept
  • A. Rescigno, et al. Epistemology in Pharmacokinetics
  • J.S. Beck. Model: Mechanistic vs. Empirical
  • A.K. Thakur. Statistical Foundations of Pharmacokinetic Modeling
  • D. Krewski, et al. The Usefulness of Pharmacokinetics in the Development of Antineoplastic and AntiAIDS Agents
  • J.L. Eiseman. Physiologic Models of Hepatic Drug Elimination
  • M. Rowland, et al. Trends in the Pharmacokinetics of Drug-Receptor Interactions
  • D.E. Schafer. In Vitro Imaging
  • A. Bertrand Brill, et al. Imaging Techniques in Pharmacology
  • A.J. Fischman, et al. Contribution of Positron Emission Tomography to Pharmacokinetic Studies
  • B. Maziere, et al. Pitfalls in Pharmacokinetic Modeling of Monoclonal Antibody Biodistribution in Man
  • G. Mariani, et al. Interspecies Scaling in Pharmacokinetics
  • K. Krishnan, et al. Stereoselectivity in Drug Disposition and Metabolism: Concepts and Mechanisms
  • B. Testa. Implications of Stereoselectivity in Clinical Pharmacokinetics
  • M. Eichelbaum, et al. Pharmacokinetic Strategies in the Development of Prodrugs
  • L.P. Balant, et al. Carcinogenetic Risk Assessment: Science or Fantasy? A.K. Thakur, et al. 5 additional articles. Author Index. Subject Index.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA13941446
  • ISBN
    • 030644089X
  • LCCN
    91037923
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    New York
  • Pages/Volumes
    x, 440 p.
  • Size
    26 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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