Concept cluster: Biology > Bio/generic drugs
adj
(physiology) That can act both positively and negatively
n
(pharmacology, nutrition) The amount of drug or nutrient which reaches the site of physiological activity after administration.
n
Any defensive measure taken against an attack using bacteria, viruses or toxins
n
biological effectiveness
n
(pharmacology) A measure of the equivalence of multiple formulations of a drug in terms of bioavailability
adj
Describing the equivalence of multiple formulations of a drug in terms of bioavailability.
n
A biopharmaceutical formulation
n
A copy of a drug, created through biotechnology.
n
A fume hood, when used in the biological sciences.
n
A bioidentical form of something.
n
A biological interaction
n
A synthetic organ (of the body) manufactured from biological material
n
(pharmacology) Any drug produced using biotechnology.
adj
biologically of biochemically protective
n
(medicine) A variant of a biopharmaceutical that is marketed following the expiry of the original patent.
n
Similarity of one biological substance to another, particularly with respect to a substance used for medicinal purposes.
n
A biological variant
n
(biology, pathology) A biological vector
n
(US) An exemption, granted to a biopharmaceutical company, to show bioequivalence to a product
adj
That enhances the potency of a drug or other chemical
n
enhancement of the potency of a drug by means of another chemical (typically another drug)
n
Anything that comodulates
n
Alternative spelling of co-stimulation [(biology) The requirement of T cells for two signals in order to become fully activated.]
n
A drug that is derived from another.
adj
Alternative form of druggable [(genetics, medicine) Describing the ability of a biological molecule (for example, a protein) to be targeted by drugs, especially by small molecule drugs.]
n
(pharmacology, pharmacy) The name given to a drug that is used to identify it irrespective of trademark etc.
adj
Synonym of genetically modified
adj
(medicine) produced by the same or homologous organs
n
orphan drug
n
Conversion into a pharmaceutical
n
A pharmacological chaperone
n
A pharmaceutical mimetic
n
(medicine) A pharmacological chaperone (protein) that is used for drug delivery
n
(pharmacology) The molecular framework responsible for a drug's biological activity
n
pharmaceutical physiology
n
The use of genetic engineering to alter an animal or plant in order to make it produce a pharmaceutical or similar product
adj
(medicine) Produced by synthesis, thought to have the same effect as its natural counterpart, but chemically different from it.
n
(pharmacology) The ratio of the median toxic dose of a drug to its median effective dose, used to gauge the safety of a particular medication (a low therapeutic index indicates that the drug is easily overdosed).

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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