Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/34960
Title: Drug enantiomers and the elderly : one drug or two?
Authors: Mifsud, Janet
Collier, Paul S.
Millership, Jeffrey Stuart
Keywords: Enantiomers
Chiral drugs
Stereochemistry
Older people -- Medical care
Pharmacokinetics -- Age factors
Issue Date: 1991-03
Publisher: University of Malta. Department of Pharmacy
Citation: Mifsud, J., Collier, P. S., & Millership, J. S. (1991). Drug enantiomers and the elderly: one drug or two?. Proceedings of the First Symposium on Drugs in the Elderly in Malta held in March 1991, Malta. 128-140.
Abstract: "All artificial bodies and all minerals have superimposable images. Opposed to these are nearly all organic substances which play an important role in plant and animal life. These are assymetric, and indeed have the kind of symmetry in which the image is not superimposable with the object." Chemical and pharmacological laboratories are generally misleading nonchiral environments, but the universe at its most fundamental level is handed, being made up of molecules, sugars and amino acids whose stereochemistry is absolutely defined. It is not therefore surprising that living organisms are able to discriminate between the two enantiomers of an exogenous chiral compound and large differences occur between the responses they evoke. It may seem strange that we have lost sight of a phenomenon whose importance was first made apparent 100 years ago.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/34960
Appears in Collections:Proceedings of the First Symposium on Drugs in the Elderly in Malta held in March 1991

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