Dose Response relationship

The exact relationship between the dose and the response depends on the biological object
under observation and the drug employed.
When a logarithm of dose as abscissa and responses as ordinate are constructed graphically,
the “S” shaped or sigmoid type curve is obtained.
The lowest concentration of a drug that elicits a response is minimal dose, and the largest
concentration after which further increase in concentration will not change the response is the
maximal dose.

  1. Graded dose effect: As the dose administered to a single subject or tissue increases, the
    pharmacological response also increases in graded fashion up to ceiling effect.
  • It is used for characterization of the action of drugs. The concentration that is required to
    produce 50 % of the maximum effect is termed as EC50 or ED50.
    50
    EC50 Log do
  • Quantal dose effect: It is all or none response, the sensitive objects give response to small
    doses of a drug while some will be resistant and need very large doses. The quantal doseeffect curve is often characterized by stating the median effective dose and the median
    lethal dose.
    Median lethal dose or LD50: This is the dose (mg/kg), which would be expected to kill one
    half of a population of the same species and strain.
    Median effective dose or ED50: This is the dose (mg/kg), which produces a desired
    response in 50 per cent of test population.
    Therapeutic index: It is an approximate assessment of the safety of the drug. It is the ratio
    of the median lethal dose and the median effective dose. Also called as therapeutic window
    or safety.
    Herapeutic index (T. I) =
  • The larger the therapeutic index, the safer is the drug. Penicillin has a very high therapeutic
  • index, while it is much smaller for the digitalis preparation.

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