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Prospects for cannabinoids as anti‐inflammatory agents

Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 2002
AbstractThe marijuana plant (Cannabis sativa) and preparations derived from it have been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. It is likely that the therapeutic benefits of smoked marijuana are due to some combination of its more than 60 cannabinoids and 200–250 non‐cannabinoid constituents.
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Adenosine, an endogenous anti-inflammatory agent

Journal of Applied Physiology, 1994
Adenosine receptors are present on most cells and organs, yet, although the physiological effects of adenosine were first described over 60 years ago, the potential therapeutic uses of adenosine have only been recognized and realized recently. A decade ago the potent anti-inflammatory effects of adenosine were first described; adenosine, acting at ...
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Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Agents

Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1979
R, Nickander, F G, McMahon, A S, Ridolfo
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Anti-inflammatory Agents

1988
Descriptions of inflammation are found in the earliest medical records of civilization. The Greeks referred to it as phlogsis and the Romans as inflammatio. Cornelius Celsus (c. 30 b.c.e. to 38 c.e.) is generally given credit for describing the four cardinal signs of inflammation as rubor et tumor cum calore et dolore: redness and swelling with heat ...
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Anti-Inflammatory Agents: Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs

1984
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory compounds (NSAIDS) have been used since 1763, when Edward Stone described the therapeutic properties of an extract of willow bark upon ague. Although almost four centuries have passed since the first medical use of aspirin and more than four decades since its use for ocular conditions (Gifford 1947; for review see Sears ...
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