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  • Book
    Tony K.L. Kiang, Kyle John Wilby, Mary H.H. Ensom.
    Summary: This comprehensive review provides a systematic, unbiased analysis, critique and summary of the available literature and generates novel clinical decision-making algorithms which can aid clinicians and scientists in practice management and research development. Potential mechanisms for the identified drug interactions are deduced from available preclinical and in vitro data which are interpreted in the context of the in vivo findings. Current limitations and gaps in the literature are summarized, and potential future research directions / experimentations are also suggested. In addition to the main objective to review the available clinical pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic drug interactions associated with WHO-recommended antimalarial drugs on the market today (i.e. chloroquine, amodiaquine, sulfadoxine, pyrimethamine, mefloquine, artemisinin, artemether, artesunate, dihydroartemisinin, artemotil, lumefantrine, primaquine, atovaquone, proguanil, piperaquine and quinine), this book also provides succinct chapter summaries on the epidemiology of malaria infection, diagnosis and therapeutics, in vivo pharmacology and chemistry, preclinical pharmacology, in vitro pharmacodynamics, in vitro reaction phenotyping, and in vitro drug-drug interaction data associated with the identified antimalarial drugs.

    Contents:
    Introduction
    Pharmacology of Recommended Antimalarial Agents
    Drug Interaction Potential of Antimalarial Drugs Based on Known Metabolic Properties of Antimalarials
    Pharmacokinetic Drug Interactions Affecting Antimalarials
    Effects of Antimalarials on the Pharmacokinetics of Co-Administered Drugs
    Effects of Antimalarials on the Pharmacokinetics of Co-Administered Antimalarials
    Pharmacodynamic Interactions: Clinical Evidence for Combination Therapy, In Vitro Interactions, and In Vivo Interactions
    Limitations, Future Directions, and Conclusions.
    Digital Access Springer 2015