| The Department of Pharmaceutical
Chemistry was established at The University of Kansas in 1967
by the late Professor Takeru Higuchi. Professor Higuchi is considered
by many to be the "father of physical pharmacy". Before
his entry into the field, the development of dosage forms was
governed largely by tradition and trial and error. Professor Higuchi
was among the first pharmaceutical scientists to recognize, and
to teach, that drug substances are chemicals and their properties
in vivo and in vitro are governed by well established physico-chemical
principles.
Pharmaceutical chemistry at The
University of Kansas continues to be defined by this philosophy:
that success in understanding drug action, in controlling drug
delivery across biological membranes and to a drug receptor site,
in the development of stable formulations and the design of sophisticated
(bio)analytical methods, requires a thorough understanding of
the basic aspects of analytical, biophysical, organic and physical
chemistry. These principles are equally important for the development
of traditional small molecule drugs and for emerging biotechnology
products such as peptides, proteins, polynuclecotides and oglionucleotides.
Pharmaceutical Chemistry at The University of Kansas embodies
those areas of research and instruction referred to variously
as pharmaceutics, physical pharmacy, preformulation, formulation,
pharmaceutical analysis and bioanalytical chemistry. All of these
areas are represented in the research and teaching activities
of the department. |