Pharmacology
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Pharmacology
Churchill Livingstone, 1995
3rd ed
Available at 5 libraries
  Aomori
  Iwate
  Miyagi
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  Kyoto
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  Tottori
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  Hiroshima
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  Tokushima
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  Okinawa
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This edition has increased clinical emphasis, providing the student with the necessary overview on how a class of drugs will be used in a clinical setting. The use of two colours helps to explain difficult concepts easily. The clinical text relating to the therapeutic use of drugs has been pulled out of the main text and put into boxes for emphasis. Also, a clinical pharmacologist has joined the author team (Professor Jim Ritter) to increase the clinical content of the book. The text aims to put pharmacology into the context of other science subjects. Many chapters have brief summaries of relevant physiological and biochemical processes at the beginning to form a basis for the subsequent treatment of pharmacological actions. "Key points boxes" are included in each chapter highlighting all the main facts and ideas. Clinical applications summary boxes reflect the book's increased emphasis on aspects of clinical pharmacology and the clinical use of drugs. This edition contains new chapters on nitric oxides, neurodegenerative disorders and on diabetes and the control of carbohydrate metabolism.
There has been major updating of: aspects of receptor pharmacology and signal transduction; cardiovascular pharmacology, including atherosclerosis and the control of lipoprotein metabolism; drug interactions; drugs action on 5HT receptors; growth factors and cytokines; the biology of cancer; the course of HIV infections and approaches to treatment; the aetiology and treatment of peptic ulcers; cyclo-oxygenases and the action of NSAIDS. In addition there are 40 new illustrations and existing illustrations have been further enhanced by the use of colour.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 General principles: how drugs act - general principles, molecular aspects
- measurement in pharmacology
- absorption, distribution and fate of drugs. Part 2 Chemical mediators: chemical mediators and the autonomic nervous system
- cholinergic transmission
- noradrenergic transmission
- other peripheral mediators - 5HT and purines
- peptides and mediators
- nitric oxides
- local hormones, inflammation and allergy
- anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressant drugs. Part 3 Drugs affecting major organ systems: the heart
- the circulation
- control of lipoprotein metabolism
- haemostasis and thrombosis
- the respiratory system
- the kidney
- the gastrointestinal system
- the endocrine pancreas and the control of blood glucose
- the endocrine system
- the reproductive system
- the haemopoietic system. Part 4 The central nervous system: chemical transmission and drug action in the central nervous system
- neurodegenerative disorders
- general anaesthetic agents
- anxiolytic and hypnotic drugs
- neuroleptic drugs
- drugs used in affective disorder
- anti-epileptic drugs and centrally-acting muscle relaxants
- analgesic drugs
- central nervous system stimulants and psychotomimetic drugs
- drug dependence and drug abuse
- local anaesthetics and other drugs that affect excitable membranes. Part 5 Chemotherapy: basic principles of chemotherapy
- cancer chemotherapy
- antibacterial agents
- antiviral drugs
- antifungal drugs
- antiprotosoal drugs
- antihelminthic drugs. Part 6 General topics: individual variation and drug interaction
- harmful effects of drugs.
by "Nielsen BookData"