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A Short History of the Drug Receptor Concept
Published 3 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Presents a history of the drug receptor concept, specifically focusing on the scientific and cultural factors influencing its development and acceptance in pharmacology. The source details the intellectual lineage of the idea, tracing it from ancient humoral medicine to modern molecular science, and highlights the crucial contributions of pioneers like John Newport Langley and Paul Ehrlich. Significant attention is given to the quantitative arguments and experimental research that eventually established the receptor occupancy theory, as well as the alternative and competing theories, such as the physical theory of drug action and the transmitter concept. Finally, the text explores the practical and therapeutic breakthroughs resulting from the receptor concept, including the development of beta-blockers and the isolation and cloning of receptors in the 1970s and 1980s. The authors aim to provide an international perspective, analyzing how science, technology, and medicine intersect within modern industrial societies.
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You can listen and download our episodes for free on more than 10 different platforms:
https://linktr.ee/medicine_made_simple
Produced by:
https://www.podcaistudio.com/