| Literature DB >> 24516494 |
Caterina Palleria1, Antonello Di Paolo2, Chiara Giofrè1, Chiara Caglioti1, Giacomo Leuzzi3, Antonio Siniscalchi4, Giovambattista De Sarro1, Luca Gallelli1.
Abstract
Drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are one of the commonest causes of medication error in developed countries, particularly in the elderly due to poly-therapy, with a prevalence of 20-40%. In particular, poly-therapy increases the complexity of therapeutic management and thereby the risk of clinically important DDIs, which can both induce the development of adverse drug reactions or reduce the clinical efficacy. DDIs can be classify into two main groups: pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic. In this review, using Medline, PubMed, Embase, Cochrane library and Reference lists we searched articles published until June 30 2012, and we described the mechanism of pharmacokinetic DDIs focusing the interest on their clinical implications.Entities:
Keywords: Absorption; adverse drug reaction; distribution; drug-drug interactions; excretion; metabolism; poly-therapy
Year: 2013 PMID: 24516494 PMCID: PMC3897029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Res Med Sci ISSN: 1735-1995 Impact factor: 1.852
Drugs binding to site I (warfarin) or II (benzodiazepines) of albumin