Results 301 to 310 of about 79,448 (358)
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Compounded Drugs

Journal of Hospice & Palliative Nursing, 2003
Compounded medications offer great opportunities for enabling healthcare professionals to control pain or other symptoms through unique delivery routes and nonstandard formulations or dosages. These formulations can include gels, trouches, suspensions, capsules, and suppositories, as well as many ...
Patrick J, Coyne   +2 more
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Risks of Compounded Drugs

JAMA Internal Medicine, 2014
A nurse notices “floaters” in an infusion bag of magnesium sulfate, initiatingachainofdiscoveries that causesasinglehospital to recall 12 000unitsof44 typesofproducts sourced from thesamecompoundingpharmacy. In this issue, Boyce et al1 describe how this drug quality problem, which was eventually identified as fungal contamination, led to the ...
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Neurogenic Drugs and Compounds

Recent Patents on CNS Drug Discovery, 2010
The advent of adult neurogenesis and neural stem cell (NSC) research opens new avenues and opportunities for treating neurological diseases and disorders, particularly for the discovery and development of novel drugs. Adult neurogenesis is modulated by a broad range of stimuli, physio- and pathological processes, trophic factors/cytokines and drugs ...
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Compound drug discrimination learning

Drug Development Research, 1989
AbstractData are summarized which indicate that drug discriminative stimuli (DDS) and exteroceptive, sensory stimuli interact in a systematic manner. Thus recent work revealed that phenomena such as overshadowing, blocking, and conditional discrimination are operable in drug discrimination learning (DDL) experiments involving exteroceptive cues and DDS.
Torbjörn U. C. Järbe   +2 more
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Compound names for drugs

Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin, 1970
As the number of presentations of drugs, both alone and in combination increases it becomes more difficult to provide suitable names. Some names are double-barrelled whilst others have a number or letter prefix or suffix. Such prefixes or suffixes vary greatly in their origin and meaning, are not normally part of official drug names, and often confuse ...
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Drug Compounding, Drug Safety, and the First Amendment

Hastings Center Report, 2013
AbstractIn September 2012, news broke of a developing drug disaster in the United States. Health authorities had linked a fungal meningitis outbreak to a contaminated steroid made by a company called the New England Compounding Center. The contaminated steroid was a compounded drug that had not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration ...
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Selection Criteria for Drug‐Like Compounds

ChemInform, 2003
AbstractFor Abstract see ChemInform Abstract in Full Text.
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Virtual Compound Screening In Drug Discovery

Future Medicinal Chemistry, 2012
Virtual screening (VS) methods are applied in both academia and drug discovery, and can be divided into ligand- and target structure-based approaches. The VS field is still evolving and is characterized by scientific heterogeneity. The value of virtual compound screening for drug discovery is often debated, in particular, given the large investments ...
Dagmar, Stumpfe   +2 more
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Defining and characterizing drug/compound function

Biochemical Pharmacology, 2014
The receptor concept, now more than century old, remains the core concept in understanding the mechanisms of disease causality and drug action. Originally formulated in the early 1900s, receptor theory has evolved in both detail and complexity as the tools of molecular biology and increasingly sophisticated research technologies have facilitated the ...
Terry, Kenakin, Michael, Williams
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