534-304 Pharmacology of Therapeutic Substances | |
|---|---|
Note | Experiments involving animals are an essential part of this subject; exemption is not possible. |
Availability | This subject is likely to be quota-restricted this year, see Quota subjects. |
Credit Points | 25 |
Coordinator | Dr J Ziogas |
Prerequisites | |
Semester | 2 (view timetable) |
Contact | 24 lectures (two per week), 72 hours of practical work (one 6-hour session per week) |
Subject Description | The teaching program covers the benefits and risks associated with the use of drugs in a variety of systemic diseases. In particular, drugs affecting the cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal and renal systems, in addition to anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory drugs. Drug action in the central nervous system; anaesthetics, sedatives and hypnotics, analgesics, drugs used in neurodegeneration and disorders of motor function will be addressed. In the practical component of the course, students will develop skills to set up and carry out experiments using computer-based recording equipment, and learn to record and analyse the results of pharmacological experiments demonstrating the use of drugs in a variety of settings. Through this process, it is envisaged that students will come to appreciate the importance of good laboratory practice, including the proper handling of laboratory animals, keeping of laboratory records, and the need for good experimental design. Thus a basis of understanding of the therapeutic benefit of drugs will be developed. Students will gain skills in:
|
Assessment | Ongoing assessment of practical work during the semester (25%); a 3-hour written examination in the examination period (75%). |
Status: Official 2007 Last Modified: Tuesday October 31 22:21 SGML to HTML Conversion: Information Division - CWIS (SDI) Authorised by: Academic Registrar Enquiries: http://unimelb.custhelp.com/