Pharmacodynamics - Part 1: How Drugs Act on the Body

Pharmacodynamics - Part 1: How Drugs Act on the Body

Pharmacodynamics: Understanding Drug Action

Introduction to Pharmacodynamics

  • Pharmacodynamics explores how drugs affect the body, focusing on their effects at specific sites of action.
  • Unlike pharmacokinetics, which examines how the body processes drugs, pharmacodynamics looks at drug interactions with receptors and enzymes.

Mechanisms of Drug Interaction

  • Drugs are categorized as agonists (activators) or antagonists (inhibitors), influencing biochemical processes without initiating new ones.
  • The discussion will center on drug-receptor interactions rather than other mechanisms like DNA interaction or osmotic balance.

Types of Agonists and Antagonists

  • Agonists can be direct (mimicking endogenous signals) or indirect (enhancing natural signaling).
  • Antagonists are classified into competitive (binding to the same site as signaling molecules) and non-competitive (binding elsewhere but altering receptor shape).

Functional Antagonism Explained

  • Functional antagonists bind to receptors and promote reactions that counteract downstream physiological processes.
  • Adrenaline serves as an example; it acts against histamine-induced vasodilation without competing for the same receptor.

Role of Partial Agonists

Video description

Drugs that activate a receptor or an enzyme are termed agonists, whereas drugs that have an inhibiting effect are called antagonists. So, the effect of an agonist is comparable to that of a natural enzyme effector or an endogenous signaling molecule for a receptor. In contrast, antagonists are analogous to natural inhibitors of enzymes or receptors. Subscribe to AMBOSS YouTube for the latest clinical examination videos, medical student interviews, study tips and tricks, and live webinars! 00:00 Introduction 01:31 Agonists 02:27 Antagonists 04:13 Partial Agonists Free 5-Day Trial: https://go.amboss.com/amboss-YT Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amboss_med/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AMBOSS.Med/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ambossmed Blog: https://blog.amboss.com/us #AMBOSSMed #MedicalSchool #Pharmacodynamics