Drug Disposition High Impact Factor Journals

Drug disposition is knowledge of a drug's fate, such as its absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion known through the acronym ADME and its pharmacokinetics. Pharmacokinetics describes the rates of these processes, and the relationships between concentration and time. Knowledge on the factors affecting drug disposition used in preclinical and early clinical drug production to forecast the potential for drug interaction, measure and understand pharmacokinetic variation in the population, and select doses for clinical trials. High-impact journals are those which are considered highly influential in their fields. Journal impact factor provides a quantitative assessment method for the ranking, review, selection, and comparison of related papers. It reflects the average number of citations to recent articles published in science and social science journals in a given year or period, and is often used as a proxy for a journal's relative importance within its field. It is first devised by the Institute for Scientific Information founder, Eugene Garfield. A journal's impact factor is calculated by splitting the number of current year citations into the source items that were published in that journal during the previous two years.

High Impact List of Articles

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