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Analyse isobolographique×Méthode de Chou-Talalay×Modélisation pharmacodynamique de population×Analyse de Schild×
DomainePharmacologiePharmacologiePharmacologiePharmacologie
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine1926198319921947
Auteur d'origineSalvatore LoeweTing-Chao Chou and Paul TalalayLewis Sheiner and Stephen RoushHenry Schild
Typesynergy quantificationsynergy quantificationdose-response modelingantagonism quantification
Source fondatriceLoewe, S. (1926). Die Mischtoxizität. Zeitschrift für Experimentelle Pathologie und Therapie, 24, 315-334. link ↗Chou, T. C., & Talalay, P. (1983). Quantitative analysis of dose-effect relationships: the combined effects of multiple drugs or enzyme inhibitors. Advances in Enzyme Regulation, 22, 27-55. DOI ↗Dahlström, B., & Nyberg, L. (1993). Population pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Clinical Pharmacokinetics, 24(1), 45-57. link ↗Schild, H. O. (1947). pA, a new scale for the measurement of drug antagonism. Journal of Physiology, 106(3), 337-357. DOI ↗
Aliasisobol, combination index, synergy testingCI method, Chou method, median-effect analysisPopPD, population PD, hierarchical PD modelingSchild plot, pA2
Apparentées3333
RésuméIsobologram analysis is a graphical and quantitative method for detecting and classifying drug interactions, developed by Salvatore Loewe in 1926. It uses dose-response data from two drugs applied individually and in combination to determine whether their interaction is additive, synergistic, or antagonistic.The Chou-Talalay method is a quantitative framework for analyzing drug interactions, developed by Ting-Chao Chou and Paul Talalay in 1983. It combines median-effect principle with the combination index (CI) to provide rigorous, model-independent assessment of synergistic, additive, or antagonistic drug effects.Population pharmacodynamic (PopPD) modeling integrates pharmacokinetics with individual dose-response relationships across patient populations to characterize drug efficacy and tolerability. Pioneered by Lewis Sheiner and colleagues, PopPD accounts for inter-individual variability in drug effects and enables rational dose optimization and response prediction.Schild analysis is a quantitative method for characterizing competitive receptor antagonism developed by Henry Schild in 1947. It uses dose-response curves in the presence and absence of antagonist to estimate the antagonist affinity constant (pA2), enabling standardized comparison of antagonist potency across drugs and experimental systems.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Isobologram Analysis · Chou-Talalay Method · Population Pharmacodynamics · Schild Analysis. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare