School of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom.
Adv Physiol Educ. 2011 Dec;35(4):438-44. doi: 10.1152/advan.00075.2011.
Here, we describe a human physiology laboratory class measuring changes in autonomic function over time in response to atropine. Students use themselves as subjects, generating ownership and self-interest in the learning as well as directly experiencing the active link between physiology and pharmacology in people. The class is designed to concomitantly convey the importance of bias in experimentation by adopting a double-blind placebo-controlled approach. We have used this class effectively in various forms with ∼600 students receiving atropine over the last 16 yr. This class has received favorable feedback from staff and students of medicine, pharmacy, and neuroscience, and we recommend it for such undergraduates. The learning objectives that students are expected to achieve are to be able to 1) know the ethical, safety, and hygiene requirements for using human volunteers as subjects; 2) implement and explain a double-blind placebo-controlled trial; 3) design, agree, and execute a protocol for making (and accurately recording) precise reproducible measurements of pulse rate, pupil diameter, and salivary flow; 4) evaluate the importance of predose periods and measurement consistency to detect effects (including any reversibility) after an intervention; 5) experience direct cause-and-effect relationships integrating physiology with pharmacology in people; 6) calculate appropriate summary statistics to describe the data and determine the data's statistical significance; 7) recognize normal variability both within and between subjects in baseline physiological parameters and also recognize normal variability in response to pharmacological treatment; 8) infer the distribution and role of muscarinic receptors in the autonomic nervous system with respect to the heart, eye, and mouth; 9) identify and explain the clinical significance of differences in effect due to the route and formulation of atropine; 10) produce and deliver a concise oral presentation of experimental findings; and 11) produce a written report in the form of a short scientific research article. The results of a typical study are presented, which demonstrate that the administration of atropine by a subcutaneous injection elicited a significant increase in pulse rate and pupil diameter and a significant decrease in salivary flow, whereas administration of atropine in an oral liquid elicited significant effects on pulse rate and salivary flow, and an oral solid format elicited a significant alteration in salivary flow alone. More detailed analysis of the salivary flow data demonstrated clear differences between the routes of administration and formulation in the onset and magnitude of action of atropine.
在这里,我们描述了一个人类生理学实验室课程,该课程测量了自主功能随时间的变化,以响应阿托品的作用。学生将自己作为研究对象,使他们对学习产生归属感和兴趣,同时直接体验生理学和药理学在人体中的积极联系。该课程旨在通过采用双盲安慰剂对照方法,同时传达实验中存在偏倚的重要性。在过去的 16 年中,我们已经以各种形式使用该课程对约 600 名学生进行了阿托品治疗。该课程得到了医学、药学和神经科学的教职员工和学生的好评,我们推荐将其用于此类本科生。学生预计能够实现的学习目标是:1)了解使用人体志愿者作为研究对象的伦理、安全和卫生要求;2)实施并解释双盲安慰剂对照试验;3)设计、同意并执行方案,以(并准确记录)精确可重复的脉搏率、瞳孔直径和唾液流量测量;4)评估预治疗期和测量一致性的重要性,以检测干预后的效果(包括任何逆转性);5)体验将生理学与药理学直接联系起来的因果关系;6)计算适当的汇总统计数据来描述数据并确定数据的统计显著性;7)认识到在基础生理参数中,个体内和个体间的正常变异性,以及在对药理学治疗的反应中认识到正常变异性;8)推断毒蕈碱受体在自主神经系统中与心脏、眼睛和口腔的分布和作用;9)识别和解释由于阿托品的给药途径和制剂不同而导致的效果差异的临床意义;10)以简短科学研究文章的形式制作和提交简明的口头实验报告;11)以简短科学研究文章的形式制作书面报告。呈现了一项典型研究的结果,该研究表明,皮下注射阿托品可显著增加脉搏率和瞳孔直径,并显著减少唾液流量,而口服液体形式的阿托品可显著影响脉搏率和唾液流量,口服固体形式的阿托品则仅引起唾液流量的显著改变。对唾液流量数据的更详细分析表明,阿托品的给药途径和制剂在作用的开始和强度方面存在明显差异。