Results 141 to 150 of about 6,945 (183)
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Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning
American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal, 1967Abstract Three cases of poisoning by carbon tetrachloride in the one industry are reported. Liver damage as evidenced by altered liver function tests was a feature of other workmen of this plant also exposed to carbon tetrachloride. Kidney damage, which is a feature of other reported cases of carbon tetrachloride poisoning, was only shown by one of the
R, Barnes, R C, Jones
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Prophylaxis of Poisoning by Carbon Tetrachloride
Nature, 1959CHRISTIE and Judah1 studied the biochemical basis of the hepatotoxicity of carbon tetrachloride and found that the earliest measurable changes, which precede histological evidence of necrosis, involved disorganization of mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid cycle activity.
C H, GALLAGHER, R A, SIMMONDS
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Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning
Military Medicine, 1945A recent experience with carbon tetrachloride gave me the opportunity to make use of methionine as a therapeutic aid. The value of this drug has been suggested by animal experiments reported by Gyorgy1and by Miller and Whipple.2The first clinical use was reported by Beattie and his associates,3who described its use in a case of carbon tetrachloride ...
S. M. Dillenberg, C. M. Thompson
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Journal of the American Medical Association, 1924
Since Hall 1 proposed about two years ago the use of carbon tetrachlorid for the removal of hookworms harbored in human beings, this substance has been generally recognized as an effective anthelmintic, and is extensively employed for combating hookworm disease in tropical regions.
B. M. PHELPS, C. H. HU
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Since Hall 1 proposed about two years ago the use of carbon tetrachlorid for the removal of hookworms harbored in human beings, this substance has been generally recognized as an effective anthelmintic, and is extensively employed for combating hookworm disease in tropical regions.
B. M. PHELPS, C. H. HU
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CARBON TETRACHLORIDE POISONING
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1932Carbon tetrachloride is used in industry as a solvent for gums, resins and fats; it is used as a dry cleanser and is a constituent of some of the rubber elements; it is used also to clean oil from machinery and, under the name of pyrene, as a fire extinguisher. 1 In medicine it is used as a vermifuge in the treatment of ankylostomiasis.
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The Brain in Fatal Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning
Archives of Neurology, 1967CARBON tetrachloride, one of the currently used lethal solvents, is notorious for its renal and hepatic toxicity. However, little attention has been given to its equally severe effects on the central nervous system (CNS). Stevens and Forster 1 and Cohen 2 have pointed out that among the earliest as well as most severe aftermaths of carbon tetrachloride
S A, Luse, W G, Wood
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