Results 311 to 320 of about 34,692 (334)
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Absorption of Enteric-Coated Aspirin

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1983
To the Editor.— In Dr Bland's comments (1982;247:2660) on the article entitled "Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Agents in Rheumatoid Arthritis and Ankylosing Spondylitis" by Wasner et al (1981;236:2168), he noted that "there remains doubt that enteric-coated aspirin absorbs with enough predictability to make it worthwhile to use." This criticism of ...
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Enteric Coated Dipropylacetate (Depakine®)

1975
Depakine® (sodium di-n-propylacetate, DPA) is a powerful anti-epileptic drug for the treatment of convulsive and non-convulsive generalized epilepsy (Bergamini et al., 1970; de Biolley and Sorel, 1969) as well as for the treatment of focal epilepsy (Meinardi, 1971). It is available in tablets of 300 mg.
G. F. Blom   +2 more
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Enteric-Coated Potassium and Bowel Obstruction

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1965
To the Editor:— Within the past year, reports have appeared of ulcerative-obstructive small-bowel lesions in patients receiving entericcoated potassium chloride-thiazide combinations. Potassium salts rather than the thiazide diuretic have been implicated.
Eliot H. Berg, Frederick Shuster
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Influence of aqueous coatings on the stability of enteric coated pellets and tablets

European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, 1999
Pancreatin pellets, placebo pellets and tablets containing vitamin B2 were coated with various aqueous and organic enteric polymers, HPMCAS, HP, Eudragit L 100-55, Eudragit L 30 D-55, CAP, CAT, CMEC and PVAP, comparatively investigated and tested for storage stability.
Karoline Bechtold, Karl Thoma
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Enteric-coated Aspirin

Southern Medical Journal, 1983
Spruill Wj, Cooper Jw
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Enteric coating of capsules*

The Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (1912), 1932
Louis Magid, William J. Husa
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A study of enteric coatings*

Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (Scientific ed.), 1945
Herman O. Tbompson, C.O. Lee
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Absorption of Enteric-Coated Aspirin-Reply

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1983
In Reply.— I stand by my statement "there remains doubt that entericcoated aspirin absorbs with enough predictability to make it worthwhile to use." In Dr Baum's study comparing plain aspirin and Ecotrin, five of 21 patients had anti-inflammatory concentrations of salicylate in the serum samples (20 to 30 mg/dL)— 25% of the patients examined.
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ENTERIC-COATED TABLETS

The Lancet, 1961
R.E. Nagle, A.J. Bowdler, Arnold Bloom
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