| Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus - The Free Dictionary 1,771,619,521 visitors served. |
|
Dictionary/ thesaurus | Medical dictionary | Legal dictionary | Financial dictionary | Acronyms | Idioms | Encyclopedia | Wikipedia encyclopedia | ? |
half-life |
Also found in: Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.02 sec. |
|
half-life (haf´līf) the time required for the decay of half of a sample of particles of a radionuclide or elementary particles; symbol t 1/2 or T 1/2. antibody half-life a measure of the mean survival time of antibody molecules following their formation, usually expressed as the time required to eliminate 50 per cent of a known quantity of immunoglobulin from the animal body. Half-life varies from one immunoglobulin class to another. biological half-life the time required for a living tissue, organ, or organism to eliminate one-half of a radioactive substance which has been introduced into it.
Half-life The time required for half of the atoms in a radioactive substance to disintegrate. Mentioned in: Positron Emission Tomography (PET) half-life (t-½) Etymology: AS, haelf + lif 1 also called radioactive half-life. the time required for a radioactive substance to lose 50% of its activity through decay. Each radionuclide has a unique half-life. 2 the amount of time required to reduce a drug level to half of its initial value. Usually the term refers to time necessary to reduce the plasma value to half of its initial value. After five half-lives, 97% of a single drug dose will be eliminated. See also biologic half-life, effective half-life. half-life, n the time in which a radioactive substance will lose half of its activity through disintegration. half-life, biologic, n the time in which a living tissue, organ, or individual eliminates, through biologic processes, half of a given amount of a substance that has been introduced into it. half-life, effective, n the half-life of a radioactive isotope in a biologic organism, resulting from the combination of radioactive decay and biologic elimination. half-life, physical, n the average time required for the decay of half the atoms in a given amount of a radioactive substance. half-life the time in which the radioactivity usually associated with a particular isotope is reduced by half through radioactive decay. half-life T1/2 The amount of time required for a substance to be reduced to one-half of its previous level by degradation and/or decay–radioactive half-life, by catabolism–biological half-life, or by elimination from a
system–eg, half-life in serum Hematology The time that cells stay in the circulation–eg, RBCs 120 days–which ↑ after splenectomy, platelets–4-6 days, eosinophils–3-7 hrs, PMNs–7 hrs Immunology The time an Ig
stays in the circulation: 20-25 days for IgG, 6 days for IgA, 5 days for IgM, 2-8 days for IgD, 1-5 days for IgE Therapeutics The time that a therapeutic agent remains in the circulation, which reflects its rate of metabolism and elimination of
parent drug and metabolites in the urine and stool. See Effective half-life.
Half life in hours
Drug Adult Children
Digoxin 6–51 11–50
Gentamycin 2-3
Lithium 8–35
Phenobarbital 50–150 40–70
Phenytoin 18–30 12–22
Procainamide 2–4
Quinidine 4–7
Theophylline 3–8 1–8
Tobramycin 2–3
Valproic acid 8–15
Advance/Lab Feb 1995, p19
How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
|
| Medical browser | ? | ? Full browser | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Halcion Haldane Haldane effect Haldol Halerpestis cymbalaria half and half nail half homeopaths Half Life 1 half moon sign half-bred half-hitch knot half-life half-normal saline half-pin splint half-sib |
| ||||
| Medical Dictionary |
| Free Tools: |
For surfers:
Free toolbar & extensions |
Word of the Day |
Help
For webmasters: Free content | Linking | Lookup box | Double-click lookup | Partner with us |
|---|