Results 261 to 270 of about 309,381 (308)
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Cocaine Identification

Clinical Toxicology, 1975
Scott's three-solution procedure was examined and should be considered the method of choice for testing pure compounds suspected to be cocaine. Because of false positives for cocaine encountered with mixtures of drugs such as lidocaine and phencyclidine, Scott's procedure should be confirmed using Kodak's Field Kit for alkaloids, or a similar kit.
C L, Winek, T, Eastly
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Cocaine Intoxication

Critical Care Clinics, 2012
Cocaine, a natural alkaloid derived from the coca plant, is one of the most commonly abused illicit drugs. Cocaine is commonly abused by inhalation, nasal insufflation, and intravenous injection, resulting in many adverse effects that ensue from local anesthetic, vasoconstrictive, sympathomimetic, psychoactive, and prothrombotic mechanisms. Cocaine can
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Cocaine intoxication

Postgraduate Medicine, 1989
Cocaine intoxication can be manifested by a multitude of chief presenting complaints. Although cardiovascular and central nervous system stimulation is common, patients may present with a broad array of symptoms. Thus, whenever the underlying cause of a set of symptoms is unexplained, the primary care physician needs to consider the possibility of ...
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Cocaine Abuse

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1993
To discuss the forms of cocaine that are available and their methods of administration and to review the medical complications of cocaine abuse.Pertinent articles were identified through a MEDLINE search of the English-language literature from 1986 to 1992 and through a manual search of bibliographies of all identified articles.All articles describing ...
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Cocaine

The American Journal of Nursing, 1984
H S, Mittleman, R E, Mittleman, B, Elser
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Crack Cocaine and Cocaine Hydrochloride

JAMA, 1996
Objective. —To review and discuss the differences and similarities between the use of crack cocaine and cocaine hydrochloride; and to determine how these findings might affect policies on the imprisonment and treatment of cocaine users. Data Sources. —English-language publications were identified through a computerized search (using MEDLINE) between
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Cocaine

Scientific American, 1982
C, Van Dyke, R, Byck
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Cocaine Medications, Cocaine Consumption and Societal Costs

PharmacoEconomics, 2000
To estimate the benefits of reduced cocaine consumption in terms of reduced societal costs resulting from the introduction of a medication for cocaine dependence with a small incremental treatment effect.Cost-benefit analysis is applied to study the implications of reduced cocaine consumption.
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Cocaine tachyphylaxis

Life Sciences, 1963
W R, TEETERS, T, KOPPANYI, F F, COWAN
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Cocaine

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1975
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