FASTtrack: Pharmacology
- ISBN: 9780857110572
- Εκδότης: PHARMACEUTICAL PRESS
- Σελίδες: 288
- Έτος Έκδοσης: 2012
30,00€
Χωρίς ΦΠΑ: 28,30€
Are your exams coming up? Are you drowning in textbooks and lecture
notes and wondering where to begin? Take the FASTtrack route to
successful study for your examinations.
FASTtrack provides the
ultimate lecture notes and is a must-have for all pharmacy students
wanting to study and test themselves for forthcoming exams.
FASTtrack: Pharmacology aims to provide a brief account of drug action, as a study and revision aid. In doing this, the authors have generally taken a therapeutic area and considered the major classes of drugs, their actions and, to a limited degree, their uses.
There are many excellent brief guides to pharmacology and so their second aim is to present a study guide which deals with molecular pharmacology at a more advanced level, so that the book is also useful for advanced pharmacology studied in the later years of pharmacy and science degrees. This study guide is therefore useful at each level of undergraduate study.
New in this edition:
Contents
1. Pharmacodynamics
2. Receptors
3. G-proteins and Their Downstream Signaling Cascades
4. Ion Channels and Transporters
5. Quantitive Pharmacology
6. Autonomic Pharmacology
7. Local Mediators
8. Pharmacokinetics and Drug Metabolism
9. Gastric Pharmacology
10. Lower Gastrointestinal Pharmacology
11. Antiemetics
12. Antiarrhythmics
13. Cardiovascular Drugs
14. Renal and Urinary Pharmacology
15. Antithrombotic Agents
16. Antiobesity Drugs
17. Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
18. Allergy
19. Anxiolytics and Hypnotics
20. Antidepressants
21. Antiepileptic Drugs
22. Antipsychotic Drugs
23. Parkinson's Disease
24. Analgesics
25. Drugs of Abuse
26. General Anaesthetics
27. Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs
28. Thyroid Disorders
29. Diabetes Mellitus
30. Antibacterial Agents
31. Non-bacterial Infections
32. Anticancer Drugs
33. Steroids
34. Oral Contraceptives
35. Immunopharmacology
36. Biopharmaceuticals
37. Variation in Clinical Efficacy