Dosage form
Dosage forms are pharmaceutical drug products presented in a specific form for use. They contain a mixture of active ingredients and inactive components, configured in a particular way and apportioned into a specific dose. For example, two products may both be amoxicillin, but one may come in 500 mg capsules, while another may be in 250 mg chewable tablets.
The term unit dose can also refer to non-reusable packaging, particularly when each drug product is individually packaged. However, the FDA differentiates this by referring to it as unit-dose "packaging" or "dispensing". Depending on the context, multi unit dose may refer to multiple distinct drug products packaged together or a single product containing multiple drugs and/or doses.
Formulations
The term dosage form may also sometimes refer only to the pharmaceutical formulation of a drug product's constituent substances, without considering its final configuration as a consumable product. Due to the somewhat ambiguous nature and overlap of these terms within the pharmaceutical industry, caution is advisable when discussing them with others who may interpret the terminology differently.Types
Dosage forms vary depending on the method/route of administration, which can include many types of liquid, solid, and semisolid forms. Common dosage forms include tablets, capsules, drinks, solutions, suspensions, and syrups, among others.A combination drug is a product that contains more than one active ingredient.
In naturopathy, dosages can take the form of decoctions and herbal teas, in addition to the more conventional methods mentioned above.
Route of administration
The route of administration for drug delivery depends on the dosage form of the substance. Different dosage forms may be available for a particular drug, especially if certain conditions restrict the ROA. For example, if a patient is unconscious or experiencing persistent nausea and vomiting, oral administration may not be feasible, necessitating the use of alternative routes, such as inhalational, buccal, sublingual, nasal, suppository, or parenteral.A specific dosage form may also be required due to issues such as chemical stability or pharmacokinetic properties. For instance, insulin cannot be given orally because it is extensively metabolized in the gastrointestinal tract before it reaches the bloodstream, preventing it from reaching therapeutic target destinations. Similarly, the oral and intravenous doses of a drug like paracetamol differ for the same reason.
Oral
- Pills, i.e. tablets or capsules
- Liquids such as syrups, solutions, elixers, emulsions, and tinctures
- Liquids such as decoctions and herbal teas
- Orally disintegrating tablets
- Lozenges or candy
- Thin films to be placed on top of or underneath the tongue as well as against the cheek
- Powders or effervescent powder or tablets, often instructed to be mixed into a food item
- Plants or seeds prepared in various ways such as a cannabis edible
- Pastes such as high fluoride toothpastes
- Gases such as oxygen
Ophthalmic
- Eye drops
- Lotions
- Ointments
- Emulsions
Inhalation
- Aerosolized medication
- Dry-powder Inhalers or metered dose inhalers
- Nebulizer-administered medication
- Smoking
- Vaporizer-administered medication
Unintended ingredients
Injection
Parenteral
- Intradermally-administered
- Subcutaneously-administered
- Intramuscularly-administered
- Intraosseous administration
- Intraperitoneally-administered
- intravenously-administered
- Intracavernously-administered
Unintended ingredients
Safe
are distributed to syringe users by needle exchange programs.Unsafe
The injection of talc from crushed pills has been associated with pulmonary talcosis in intravenous drug users.Topical
- Creams, liniments, balms, lotions, or ointments, etc.
- Gels and hydrogels
- Ear drops
- Transdermal and dermal patches to be applied to the skin
- Powders
Unintended use
- It is not safe to calculate divided doses by cutting and weighing medical skin patches, because there's no guarantee that the substance is evenly distributed on the patch surface. For example, fentanyl transdermal patches are designed to slowly release the substance over 3 days. It is well known that cut fentanyl transdermal consumed orally have cause overdoses and deaths.
- Single blotting papers for illicit drugs injected from solvents in syringes may also cause uneven distribution across the surface.
Other
- Intravaginal administration
- * Vaginal rings
- * Capsules and tablets
- * Suppositories
- Rectal administration
- * Suppositories
- * Suspensions and solutions in the form of enemas
- * Gels
- Urethral
- Nasal sprays