Results 161 to 170 of about 46,713 (191)
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1979
To the Editor.— A recent article by Puggiari and Cherington, "Botulism and Guanidine: Ten Years Later" (240:2276, 1978), reported on two additional cases of botulism treated with guanidine hydrochloride. The authors noted improved strength of ocular and limb muscles but not of respiratory muscles. They then reviewed the literature and noted that "some
James Chin+2 more
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To the Editor.— A recent article by Puggiari and Cherington, "Botulism and Guanidine: Ten Years Later" (240:2276, 1978), reported on two additional cases of botulism treated with guanidine hydrochloride. The authors noted improved strength of ocular and limb muscles but not of respiratory muscles. They then reviewed the literature and noted that "some
James Chin+2 more
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1968
Abstract A 57-year-old woman with a fatal disease, presumably botulism, was treated intermittently with guanidine hydrochloride over a 20-day period. Guanidine was given because it enhances the release of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction. During treatment, ptosis and extraocular palsies were relieved, strength in proximal muscles improved ...
Donald W. Ryan, Michael Cherington
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Abstract A 57-year-old woman with a fatal disease, presumably botulism, was treated intermittently with guanidine hydrochloride over a 20-day period. Guanidine was given because it enhances the release of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction. During treatment, ptosis and extraocular palsies were relieved, strength in proximal muscles improved ...
Donald W. Ryan, Michael Cherington
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Natural Product Reports, 1996
AbstractFor Abstract see ChemInform Abstract in Full Text.
Roberto G S, Berlinck, Miriam H, Kossuga
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AbstractFor Abstract see ChemInform Abstract in Full Text.
Roberto G S, Berlinck, Miriam H, Kossuga
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ChemInform, 2006
AbstractChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF.
A. V. Golounin+2 more
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AbstractChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF.
A. V. Golounin+2 more
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Guanidine and guanidine derivatives
1961While the knowledge of the blood sugar lowering properties of the sulphonamide derivatives have been available for 20 years, the hypoglycaemic effect of guanidine was already known before insulin was discovered. The attempt performed 30 years ago in troducing synthalin, a derivative of guanidine, in diabetes mellitus therapy failed.
Hans-Dieter Söling, Werner Creutzfeldt
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Guanidine Derivatives in Medicine
New England Journal of Medicine, 1973FIFTY years have passed since the introduction of insulin into medicine. It is not widely known that guanidine derivatives were first used in the therapy of diabetes at about the same time, and that the effects of guanidine in a biologic system were first described nearly 100 years ago.1 Over the years, a wide variety of guanidine derivatives have ...
Philip R. Steinmetz+2 more
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Disturbances in nitrogen balance are the hallmark of renal insufficiency. More sophisticated studies indicate that this is not simply a matter of balance. While failure to excrete adequate quantities may be the initiating event, a variety of adaptions and compensatory phenomena complicate the picture.
Burton D. Cohen, Harini Patel
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Guanidination of horse methemoglobin
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1977Abstract Reaction of horse methemoglobin with O -methylisourea at pH 10.2 results in 95% conversion of lysine residues to homoarginine. Analysis of the chymotryptic peptides showed that no single ϵ-amino group was unreactive. Guanidination decreases the dependence of the sedimentation coefficient on hydrogen ion concentration in the range of pH 8 to
J.David Sakura, John A. Rupley
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GUANIDINE AND THE PARATHYROIDS
Endocrinology, 1926Even a cursory examination of microscopic sections from the parathyroids removed at the routine autopsies is sufficient to make one realize how scanty is the basis upon which any histological interpretation may be made. In even a small collection of sections from the parathyroids, the variety of appearances which are usually seen, suggests that factors
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Experientia, 1969
Ein neues Alkaloid, Pterogynin, wurde aus der Rinde vonPterogyne nitens Tul. (Leguminosae) isoliert und seine Struktur bestimmt. Es handelt sich um das N,N-Di(isopenten-2-yl)-guanidin.
Mabel F. de Petruccelli+2 more
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Ein neues Alkaloid, Pterogynin, wurde aus der Rinde vonPterogyne nitens Tul. (Leguminosae) isoliert und seine Struktur bestimmt. Es handelt sich um das N,N-Di(isopenten-2-yl)-guanidin.
Mabel F. de Petruccelli+2 more
openaire +3 more sources