% File src/library/datasets/man/Indometh.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2007 R Core Development Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{Indometh} \docType{data} \alias{Indometh} \title{Pharmacokinetics of Indomethicin} \description{ The \code{Indometh} data frame has 66 rows and 3 columns of data on the pharmacokinetics of indomethicin. } \usage{Indometh} \format{ This data frame contains the following columns: \describe{ \item{Subject}{ an ordered factor with containing the subject codes. The ordering is according to increasing maximum response. } \item{time}{ a numeric vector of times at which blood samples were drawn (hr). } \item{conc}{ a numeric vector of plasma concentrations of indomethicin (mcg/ml). } } } \details{ Each of the six subjects were given an intravenous injection of indomethicin. } \source{ Kwan, Breault, Umbenhauer, McMahon and Duggan (1976), \dQuote{Kinetics of Indomethicin absorption, elimination, and enterohepatic circulation in man}, \emph{Journal of Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics}, \bold{4}, 255--280. Davidian, M. and Giltinan, D. M. (1995) \emph{Nonlinear Models for Repeated Measurement Data}, Chapman & Hall (section 5.2.4, p. 134) Pinheiro, J. C. and Bates, D. M. (2000) \emph{Mixed-effects Models in S and S-PLUS}, Springer. } \examples{ require(stats) fm1 <- nls(conc ~ SSbiexp(time, A1, lrc1, A2, lrc2), data = Indometh, subset = Subject == 1) summary(fm1) } \keyword{datasets}