The Journey of Human Drugs from Their Design at the Bench to Their Fate in Crops

The topic of this book is dedicated to the analysis, fate, metabolism, effects, and remediation of pharmaceutically active compounds in water-soil-biota systems. While the majority of readers are likely to already have a broad understanding of potential entry points, flows, transformation pathways, and temporary and permanent sinks of drugs in the environment, the objectives of this first chapter are fourfold: (a) to provide a concise overview of the journey a drug takes from its inception at the laboratory bench to the desk of the reviewer at the regulatory agency; (b) to understand the biological and physiological processes a drug undergoes from administration to humans – or to the animal in case of veterinary medicines – to their excretion and ultimately discharge into wastes; (c) to describe the physico-chemical space small-molecule drugs reside in as this characteristic largely governs their later environmental fate; (d) to review their presence, fate, and metabolism in crops and plants determined using innovative analytical methods; as well as (e) to evaluate the effects and remediation of drugs in crops and biota.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Montemurro, Nicola, Peña-Herrera, Juan Manuel, Ginebreda Martí, Antoni, Eichhorn, Peter, Pérez, Sandra
Other Authors: Montemurro, Nicola [0000-0002-7496-203X]
Format: capítulo de libro biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer 2020-08-21
Subjects:ADME, Analytical methods, Crops, Distribution, Drug development, Drug discovery, Earthworms, Fate, Humans, Metabolism, Soil, Wetlands,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/237337
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