Age affects drug action significantly due to physiological changes that occur throughout the lifespan. In infants and children, drug metabolism and excretion may be less efficient, leading to prolonged drug effects and increased sensitivity to certain medications. In older adults, decreased organ function, altered body composition, and polypharmacy can also impact drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination, potentially resulting in increased side effects or toxicity. Therefore, age must be considered when prescribing medications to ensure safety and efficacy.
No, Hair follicle Dose not affect age.
Pharmacological action is the therapeutic action of the drug on the body. For example, how the drug acts on the cells, what the drug does to the cells. Whereas the alteration or changes produced after the drug has acted (the action being; how the drug acted and what action did the drug do) on the cells is pharmacologial effect. Simply, in layman's terms pharmacological action is what action the drug can do and the pharmacological effect is what the action of the drug has done.
Pharmaceutical phase of drug action is the first of the three phases to drug action. It includes the disintegration of the dosage form as well as the dissolution of the drug
lysosomes play a role in drug action...
a drug that inhibits the action of the sympathetic sysytem
The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 forbids employment discrimination against anyone at least 40 years of age in the United States (Wikipedia). Example of a permissible action: Requiring all employees under age 30 to undergo drug testing.
site of action is the location (site) where the drug do there action ........ while onset of action is the starting of effects produced due to drug............... both are clearly different..........
Local Action
When one drug potentiates the action of another drug, it enhances or magnifies its effects, either by increasing its efficacy or prolonging its duration. Conversely, when one drug diminishes the action of another drug, it decreases its effectiveness or weakens its impact, potentially leading to reduced therapeutic benefits.
The route of administration of a drug can affect its bioavailability by influencing factors such as first-pass metabolism, absorption rate, and drug stability. For example, intravenous administration bypasses the first-pass metabolism, leading to higher bioavailability compared to oral administration where the drug may be metabolized before reaching the systemic circulation. Additionally, different routes can also affect the onset of action and duration of drug effects.
The specific action of the drug ketoanalogue is to treat patients with chronic kidney disease. It is thought that this drug may delay the need for dialysis.
(I am not a doctor) Lamictal will only affect a drug test if it's included in the list of drugs they're looking for. It is of course a "controlled substance" and if you aren't prescribed it, you shouldn't be taking it.