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Pharmacoeconomics of Intravenous Drug Administration

PharmacoEconomics, 1992
Direct administration of a drug into a vein guarantees bioavailability, i.e. the total amount of drug is fully available to the bloodstream for transport to all areas of the body. What is not ensured is the safety, need and 'value for money' of this route.
S E, Parker, P G, Davey
openaire   +2 more sources

Endocarditis in Intravenous Drug Abusers

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1990
IE due to parenteral drug use is an ever-increasing problem for physicians working in the ED. IE may present with a multitude of signs and symptoms of variable severity. Patients may complain of only vague symptoms consistent with a viral syndrome, or they may present with a neurologic or cardiovascular catastrophe.
R, Roberts, C M, Slovis
openaire   +2 more sources

Intravenous drug deliver systems

2015
Purpose. The Third Consensus Conference on the Safety of Intravenous Drug Delivery Systems was convened to evaluate the benefits and risks of available systems and assess ongoing threats to the safety of intravenous drug delivery. Summary. The Third Consensus Conference on the Safety of Intravenous Drug Delivery Systems convened in Chicago, Illinois in
Struys, Michel   +2 more
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Intravenous Drug Abuse Mimicking Vasculitis

Southern Medical Journal, 2001
"Mimickers" of vasculitis are well-documented in the literature. We report a case of intravenous drug abuse manifesting with signs and symptoms suggestive of vasculitis. This case highlights the need for diagnostic precision in the evaluation of suspected vasculitis.
D, Khanna, T J, Drehmer
openaire   +2 more sources

Intravenous drug delivery systems: Toward an intravenous “vaporizer”

Journal of Clinical Anesthesia, 1996
Anesthesiologists now routinely use a variety of sophisticated devices for the delivery of intravenous (Iv) drugs. The gravity driven infusion systems in widespread use just a few years ago are primitive compared with the convenience, accuracy, and precision provided by today’s infusion pumps.
openaire   +2 more sources

HIV and intravenous drug use

AIDS, 1988
There is now evidence from a wide variety of geographic areas that many intravenous drug users will change their behavior in order to reduce their risk of developing AIDS. There is even evidence from some areas that the behavior change has led to relative stabilization of seroprevalence rates, although longer-term studies will be needed to establish ...
D C, Des Jarlais, S R, Friedman
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Long-term Intravenous Drug Therapy

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1980
To the Editor.— Medications requiring daily intravenous (IV) administration for weeks or months present the difficult task of maintaining IV access while avoiding infectious, metabolic, and sociologic complications. At our institution, we have been using a new protocol for long-term IV therapy of systemic mycoses that has proved very successful.
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AIDS and intravenous drug abuse.

NIDA research monograph, 1989
The importance of intravenous drug-abuse as a vehicle of HIV and AIDS is evidenced on the basis of recent epidemiological data gathered in the USA. The rate of seropositivity among intravenous drug-addicts (whose total number i is close to one million) is estimated at more than 20 percent.
C R, Schuster, R W, Pickens
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Continuous intravenous administration of drugs.

Acta anaesthesiologica Belgica, 1983
Continuous intravenous administration of drugs may be a problem in clinical practice; for several reasons patients do not always receive the dose of drug intended for them. Problems of parenteral fluid composition are related to the solvent, dilution and drug interactions.
Paris, P., Hans, Pol, Lamy, Maurice
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Intravenous drug use‐related endophthalmitis

Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology, 2022
Kuan‐Jen Chen   +3 more
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