PHARMACEUTICAL AND TOXICOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY II
cod. 00133

Academic year 2012/13
4° year of course - First semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Chimica farmaceutica (CHIM/08)
Field
Discipline chimiche, farmaceutiche e tecnologiche
Type of training activity
Characterising
72 hours
of face-to-face activities
9 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in - - -

Learning objectives

The student is expected to acquire, by attending lessons and through individual study, the following competences.

Knowledge and understanding: the student should demonstrate to know the physico-chemical bases which underlie the drug's action and to understand how small chemical modifications over a common scaffold result into corresponding variations in the biological activity. The student should aslo demonstrate to know the requirement for a molecule to be a central nervous system drug

Applying knowledge and understanding: the student should demonstrate to be able to make use of his/her knowledge, ability of analysis and understanding of the structure-activity relationship for series of drugs to ideate and put forward argumentations to solve practical problems related to the discipline. The student should demosntrate to have a professional approach to the discipline.

Furthrmore, attending the lessons has the objective to increase the 'making judgment' ability and to increase the communication skills.

Making Judgment: the student should be able to interact with the topics and themes proposed by the teacher and be able to make autonomous judgments.
Communication skills: the student should be able to communicate in a clear and critical form the results of his/her individual elaboration, thus demonstrating the appropriate knowledge of the topics covered in the course.

Prerequisites

Organic chemistry, Human anatomy, General pharmacology, biochemistry, pharmaceutical chemistry I

Course unit content

The course is finalized at providing the student with the theoretical bases and the notions needed to understand the mechanism of action, the structure-activity relationships, the therapeutical applications for classes of drugs active on the central and peripherical nervous system.

Full programme

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Bibliography

Patrick GL, Introduction to Medicinal chemistry, 5th Edition, Oxford press, London

Teaching methods

he course is organized through frontal lessons, each one constituting a unit of a didactic module centered around the specific topics. In each unit, the student will be provided with the bases to acquire knowledge and understanding, and to apply the knowledge and the understanding to that specific topic covered in that specific unit.

Assessment methods and criteria

By means of an oral exam, the student should demonstrate to have correctly aquired the knowledge and understanding, and the application of knowledge and understanding for at least three topics covered during the course. The student should also demonstrate to be able to make autonomous judgments and to have appropriate communication skills.
The exam is passed only if all the competences are correctly acquired. The final grade will be formed by knowledge and understanding (30%), applying knowledge and understanding (30%), making judgments (20%) and communication skills (20%)

Other information

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