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Biology_Edexcel_A-snab_Alevel

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  1. the-circulatory-system
    8 主题
  2. diet-and-health
    11 主题
  3. gas-exchange-cell-membranes-and-transport
    8 主题
  4. nucleic-acids
    3 主题
  5. proteins
    10 主题
  6. inheritance
    7 主题
  7. cell-structure-and-organisation
    7 主题
  8. cell-division
    3 主题
  9. reproduction-and-inheritance
    4 主题
  10. differentiation-and-variation
    5 主题
  11. biodiversity
    9 主题
  12. resources-from-plants
    10 主题
  13. ecosystems-and-energy-transfer
    7 主题
  14. photosynthesis
    7 主题
  15. climate-change
    10 主题
  16. evolution
    3 主题
  17. forensics
    3 主题
  18. microorganisms-and-immunity
    11 主题
  19. muscles-and-movement
    3 主题
  20. respiration
    7 主题
  21. homeostasis
    4 主题
  22. exercise
    4 主题
  23. response-to-the-environment
    8 主题
  24. the-brain-behaviour-and-disease
    10 主题
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Development of Drug Testing

  • Whenever new drugs are developed, they first need to be tested for effectiveness and side-effects, before they can be sold to the general public

  • These are known as clinical trials and are crucial to avoid exposing the public to drugs that may pose a risk to their health

  • Drug testing has not always been this scientific or regulated in the past

Digitalis soup

  • William Withering was an English scientist from the 1700s

  • He is best known for his work on using digitalis as a treatment for swelling caused by heart failure (known as dropsy)

  • Withering treated his patients with an extract made from foxgloves, which contains the drug digitalis

  • Foxglove is poisonous to humans, so he made different versions of his remedy containing different concentrations of digitalis

  • These versions were called his digitalis soup

  • He experimented on his patients to find the most effective concentration of digitalis that would treat dropsy without poisoning the patient

Modern methods of drug testing

  • Modern drug testing protocols are much more rigorous than those of the past

  • The first step is modelling the potential effects of the drug using computers

  • Next, the drug will be tested on human tissues in a laboratory, before being tested on animals

  • Should the drug pass these steps without causing any major problems, then it will continue on to the clinical trial stage where human test subjects will take it

  • There are three phases of testing during clinical trials:

    • Phase 1 involves a small group of healthy individuals to determine how the body will react to the drug, side effects of the drug and the correct dosage that should be taken

    • Phase 2 will be done on a larger group of patients (non-healthy individuals who require the drug) to determine the effectiveness of the drug

    • Phase 3 involves comparing the drug to existing drugs to see if it works any better. A large number of patients are split into two groups, each of which receives either the new drug or the existing one

Placebos

  • Placebos are typically done during phase 2 of a clinical trial

  • Patients are split into two groups – one will receive the drug and the other group will be given a placebo, which looks exactly like the drug but contains no active ingredients

    • The patients are not told which group they are in

  • This provides a way for scientists to determine whether the drug actually works

  • Certain patients display what is known as the placebo effect 

    • This is where a patient will show improvements in their health due to the belief that they are receiving the drug

Double blind studies

  • These happen during phase 2 and 3 of clinical trials

  • Double blind means that neither the patient nor the doctor knows which patient is receiving the drug or the placebo

  • This reduces the effect that the attitude of either doctor or patient may have on the results

    • For example, in some cases, a doctor may believe a patient is improving more if they know the patient is receiving the drug