purplehaze147
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2010
- Messages
- 470
I'm having trouble on figuring out how efficacy effects a liglands potency. I know the basics I think. A super agonist has a higher efficacy then the relative endogenic neurotransmitter(naturally occurring ligland in the brain or body), a full agonist has about the same efficacy as the relative endogenic neurotransmitter, a partial agonist has a lower efficacy then the endogenic neurotransmitter, a silent agonist is a partial agonist with a efficacy so low it acts as a anatagonist, and an inverse agonists efficacy is so low it occupies every receptor site of the relative endogenic neurotransmitters receptors, a inverse agonist would be a true antagonist. Right?
But Im still not sure how it effects a drugs potency, the efficacy of potent drugs varys a lot. I understand how affinity effects the potency tho, the higher the affinity the more tightly the ligland binds to the receptor and I realize that efficacy also comes into play when determining a drugs potency.
Can someone please explain.
But Im still not sure how it effects a drugs potency, the efficacy of potent drugs varys a lot. I understand how affinity effects the potency tho, the higher the affinity the more tightly the ligland binds to the receptor and I realize that efficacy also comes into play when determining a drugs potency.
Can someone please explain.
