Studies in the history of modern pharmacology and drug therapy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Studies in the history of modern pharmacology and drug therapy
(Collected studies series)
Routledge, 2018, c2012
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
"First issued in paperback 2018"--T.p.verso
Description and Table of Contents
Description
An acknowledged expert on the history of modern pharmacology and drug therapy, John Parascandola here brings together 19 of his most important papers on these subjects. The book is divided into three topical sections. In the first group of articles, devoted to pharmacological theory, Dr. Parascandola sheds new light on our understanding of the history of such key pharmacological concepts as receptor theory, structure-activity relationships, and the role of stereochemistry in physiological action. The second section focuses on the discipline of pharmacology and offers insights into the pivotal role played by John J. Abel in the shaping of the field, the development of pharmacology in schools of pharmacy and in the Federal Government, and the national pharmacological society's membership ban on pharmacologists working in industry. The final section on drug therapy discusses various drugs from antibiotics to sulfones, and their use in the treatment of diseases such as leprosy and syphilis.
Table of Contents
- Contents: Preface
- Part I Pharmacological Science and Theory: Structure-activity relationships: the early mirage
- Origins of receptor theory of drug action (with Ronald Jasensky)
- The controversy over structure-activity relationships in the early 20th century
- The evolution of stereochemical concepts in pharmacology
- Arthur Cushny, optical isomerism and the mechanism of drug action
- Carl Voegtlin and the 'arsenic receptor' in chemotherapy
- The theoretical basis of Paul Ehrlich's chemotherapy
- The development of receptor theory. Part II Discipline of Pharmacology: John J. Abel and the early development of pharmacology at the John Hopkins University
- Development of pharmacology in American schools of pharmacy (with John Swann)
- The beginnings of pharmacology in the federal government
- The 'preposterous provision': the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics' ban on industrial pharmacologists, 1908-1941. Part III Drug Therapy: The search for the active oxytocic principal of ergot: laboratory science and clinical medicine in conflict
- The introduction of antibiotics into therapeutics
- Miracle at Carville: the introduction of the sulfones for the treatment of leprosy
- John Mahoney and the introduction of penicillin to treat syphilis
- From germs to genes: trends in drug therapy, 1852-2002
- Chaulmoogra oil and the treatment of leprosy
- From mercury to miracle drugs: syphilis therapy over the centuries
- Index.
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