Define Posology | Factors Affecting Dose | Just knowhat |

POSOLOGY


POSOLOGY is derived from Greek word posos Means how much and logos means science. So posology is a branch of medical science which deals with dose & quantity of drugs which can be administered to a patient to get a desired action. In this, there are many factors which influence the doses.

Factors affecting dose

1. Age

2. Sex

3. Body Weigh

4. Route of Administration 

5. Time of Administration

6. Environmental Factors

7. Emotional factors

8. Presence of disease

9. Accumulation

10. Additive effects

11. Synergism

12. Antagonism

13. Idiosyncrasy 

14. Tolerance

15. Tachyphylaxis

16. Metabolic disturbance


1. Age: The pharmacokinetics of many drugs changes with age. Newborn infants (pediatric) are abnormally sensitive to certain drugs because of the immature state of their hepatic and renal function by which drugs are inactivated and eliminated from the body. Failure to detoxify and eliminate drugs results in their accumulation in the tissues to a toxic level. Whereas, elderly patients are more sensitive to some drug effect eg. hypnotics which may produce confusion state in them.


2. SexWomen do not always respond to the action of drug in the same manner as it done in men. Special care should be taken when drugs are administered during menstruation, pregnancy & lactation. Alcohol, barbiturate, narcotic drugs acts on foetus through placenta. During lactation, morphine, tetracycline avoided because its affect on babies.


3. Body weight: The average dose is mentioned either in terms of mg per kg body weight. Another technique used as a total single for an adult weighing between 50 100kg. However, the dose expressed in this fashion may not apply in case of obese patients, children & malnourished patients. It should be calculated according to body weight.


4. Route of administration: I.V doses of drug are usually smaller than the oral doses, because Intravenous route this might enhance the chances of drug toxicity. The effectiveness of drug formulation is generally controlled by the route of administration.


5. Time of administration: The presence of food in the stomach delay absorption of drug & rapidly absorbed from the empty stomach. But it does not mean that much effective when taken during or after meal.- Iron, arsenic & cod-liver oil should be given after meal & antacid drugs taken before meal.


6. Environmental factors: The personality & behavior of a physician may influence effect of especially the drugs which are intended for use in a psychosomatic disorders. The females are more emotional than male & required less dose of certain drugs. Inert dosage forms called placebos which resemble the actual medicament in the physical properties are known to produce therapeutic benefit in disease like angina pectoris & bronchial asthma.


7. Presence of disease: Drugs like barbiturates & chlorpromazine may produce unusually prolonged effect in patient having liver cirrhosis. Such as, streptomycin produce toxic effect on these patient their kidney function is not working properly because streptomycin excreted through kidney.


8. Accumulation: Some drugs produces the toxic effect if it is repeatedly administered for long time e.g. digitalis, emetine, heavy metals because these drugs excreted slowly. This occurs due to accumulative effect of the drug.


9. Additive effect: When two or more drugs administered together is equivalent to sum of their individual pharmacological action, the phenomenon is called as additive effect. E.g. ephedrine & aminophylline in the treatment of bronchial ashtma.


10. Synergism: When desired therapeutic result needed is difficult to achieve with single drug at that time two or more drugs are used in the combination form for increasing their action this phenomenon is called synergism. E.g. procaine & adrenaline combination, increase the duration of action of procaine.


11. AntagonismWhen the action of one drug is opposed by the other drug on the same physiological system is known as drug antagonism. The use of antagonistic response to drugs is valuable in the treatment of poisoning. Eg. milk of magnesia is given in acid poisoning where alkaline effect of milk of magnesia neutralise the effect of acid poisoning. When adrenaline & acetylcholine are given together, they neutralise the effect of each other due to antagonism because adrenaline is vasoconstrictor & acetylcholine is vasodilator.


12. Idiosyncrasy:  Idiosyncrasy is also called as allergy. An extraordinary response to a drug which is different from its characteristic pharmacological action is called idiosyncrasy. E.g. small quty, of aspirin may cause gastric hemorrhage.E.g. some persons are sensitive to penicillin & sulphonamide because they produce severe toxic effect.


13. Tolerance: When an unusually large dose of a drug is required to elicit an affect ordinarily produced by the normal therapeutic dose of the drug, the phenomenon is called as drug tolerance. E.g. smokers can tolerate nicotine, alcoholic can tolerate large quantity of alcohol. 

The drug tolerance is of two types: 

i) True tolerance - which is produced by oral & parenteral administration of the drug. 

ii) Pseudo tolerance - which is produced only to the oral route of administration.


14. Tachyphylaxis: When some drugs administered repeatedly at short intervals, the cell receptors get blocked up & pharmacological response to that drug decreased. The decreased response cannot be reversed by increasing the dose this phenomenon is called tachyphylaxis or acute tolerance. E.g. ephedrine given repeated dose at short intervals in the treatment of bronchial asthma may produce very less response due to tachyphylaxis.


15. Metabolic disturbance: Changes in water electrolyte balance & acid base balance, body temperature & other physiological factor may modify the effect of drug. E.g. salicylates reduce body temperature in only in case an individual has rise in body temperature. They have no antipyretic effect if the body temperature is normal.

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