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4
|
route by which the drug is absorbed into the circulation via oral or gastric mucose or the small intestine
|
8
|
The study of poisons and unwanted responses to drugs and other chemicals
|
9
|
(2 words) The time it takes for one half of the original amount of a drug to be removed from the body
|
11
|
What the drug does to the body
|
12
|
Decreasing response to repeated drug doses
|
13
|
(3 words) metabolism of a drug and its passage from the liver into the circulation
|
14
|
Any characteristic of the patient, especially a disease state, that makes the use of a given medication dangerous for the patient
|
16
|
(2 words) Ratio of a drug's toxic level to the level that provides therapeutic benefits
|
17
|
2 drugs with the same bioavilability and concentration of active ingredients
|
19
|
Permanent changes in genetic composition
|
20
|
Study of drugs' movement into, within, and out of the body
|
22
|
The study of how various drug forms influence what the body does to the drug and what the drug does to the body
|
25
|
Therapy given for the most likely illness present
|
27
|
Extent of drug absorption, or how much of the drug will reach the circulation
|
31
|
The study of natural (plant and animal) drug sources
|
34
|
Main organ for excretion
|
35
|
The elimination of drugs from the body
|
36
|
Place where metabolism frequently occurs
|
37
|
How the drug gets into the body
|
38
|
(2 words) Highest blood level
|
39
|
The time a drug concentration is sufficient to elicit a therapeutic response
|
40
|
The time it takes for a drug to reach its maximum therapeutic response
|
41
|
Physiologic or psychological need for a drug
|
42
|
Therapy to maintain the integrity of body functions while recovering from trauma or illness
|
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