Results 251 to 260 of about 33,908 (299)
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Activated charcoal: the untold story

Accident and Emergency Nursing, 2003
Introduction. To identify the prevalence and appropriateness of prescribing activated charcoal in the management of acute poisoning and to document patient compliance with treatment.Methods. A prospective study was conducted, between October 1998 and September 1999, on patients attending our accident and emergency department, with a history of overdose.
Richard M, Lynch, Robert, Robertson
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Charcoal Briquettes and Activated Charcoal Manufacturing

1985
There is always a need to make charcoal more convenient in use, and special industrial applications require charcoal in agglomerated shapes. For this purpose, several techniques are available to the charcoal producer: extrusion, pelletizinq and briquetting.
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Activated Charcoal Reborn

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1985
In the JanuaryArchives, Curtis et al 1 , described their study of the efficacy of ipecac alone v activated charcoal plus a cathartic v the three together in the treatment of a simulated aspirin tablet overdose. They accounted for 70% of the ingested aspirin dose in the urine of patients following a standard ipecac regimen, compared with 56% in patients
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Activated Charcoal—Treatment or Toxin?

Journal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology, 1999
Recently, a 2 ½-year-old child died from aspiration of activated charcoal used to treat an ingestion of an unknown blue liquid from a chemistry set.1 The substance was ultimately found to be methyl...
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Activated Charcoal RCT

American Journal of Therapeutics, 2003
Gabrielle M, Cooper, Nicholas A, Buckley
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Optimum 222Rn-adsorbing Activated Charcoals

Health Physics, 1992
Adsorptive and desorptive data are presented for 20 activated charcoal (AC) types that may be used in passive 222Rn sampling devices. Open-faced AC canisters were exposed for 3 d at room temperature to known radon and water vapor concentrations. Gamma measurements of radon progeny activity show that the optimum radon-adsorbing ACs are Calgon-PCB, Norit
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Heparin Adsorption on Activated Charcoal

Clinical Toxicology, 1977
By vitro studies have shown that sodium heparin adsorbs significantly at pH 7.4 conditions onto a typical activated charcoal. These results imply that enhanced heparin removal from blood should be anticipated in hemoperfusion systems that utilize uncoated charcoals.
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Activated Charcoal

Annals of Emergency Medicine, 1980
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