Results 321 to 330 of about 108,689 (343)
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Chlorhexidine varnishes: a review
Journal of Clinical Periodontology, 2002AbstractBackground: Of all chemical plaque control agents, chlorhexidine digluconate has proven to be the most effective and safe. Since 1964, varnishes have been used for local delivery of fluor and are reported to be an effective and easy to use vehicle.
P. A. Adriaens, S. Matthijs
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Chlorhexidine and Contaminants
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1976Excerpt To the editor: In their otherwise excellent review article on the importance of handwashing in preventing nosocomial infections (Ann Intern Med83:683-690, 1975), Steere and Mallison have pe...
S.D. Alatary, A. Rosenberg
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Chlorhexidine and chondrolysis in the knee
The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British volume, 1999We have summarised the clinical and pathological changes in the knees of three patients in whom aqueous chlorhexidine 0.02% had been used as the irrigation solution during arthroscopically-assisted reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament. Even very dilute solutions of chlorhexidine can cause marked chondrolysis of articular cartilage leading ...
D. J. Bracey, A. L. van Huyssteen
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Contact dermatitis to chlorhexidine
Contact Dermatitis, 1982In a 3‐year period, 551 patients were patch tested with chlorhexidine gluconate 1% in water. 14 patients showed a strong and obviously relevant reaction. A severe dermatitis developed daring treatment with a chlorhexidine preparation in 10 patients with venous or traumatic ulcers of the leg, and in 4 patients with skin infection on the face and/or ...
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Oral pharmacology of chlorhexidine
Journal of Clinical Periodontology, 1977Abstract The paper concerns factors which affect the binding and plaque‐inhibiting effect of chlorhexidine‐digluconate (CH) in the human oral cavity.About one‐third of the administered dose was retained after mouth rinses (0.05‐0.40 % w/v) and after toothbrushing with a CH gel (1 % w/w) measured by [14C]‐chlorhexidine. The following CH concentration in
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The mode of action of chlorhexidine
Journal of Periodontal Research, 1973Radioactive chlorhexidine * (14C labeled in the phenyl rings) was used to study absorption by and desorption From Streptococcus mulans and teeth.When S. mutans was grown in brain heart infusion broth, the rate of absorption by the bacteria was rapid, but when bacteria were grown in medium containing sucrose, absorption was slow apart from an initial ...
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