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Opium

The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
Abstract This chapter reappraises the close association between opium use and the writers and artists of the Romantic period. Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Thomas De Quincey famously consumed the drug in its various forms and wrote about it as did other nineteenth-century figures.
  +21 more sources

Gene clustering and copy number variation in alkaloid metabolic pathways of opium poppy

open access: yesNature Communications, 2020
Genes in plant secondary metabolic pathways enable biosynthesis of a range of medically and industrially important compounds, and are often clustered on chromosomes.
Qiushi Li   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Opium Alkaloids in Harvested and Thermally Processed Poppy Seeds

open access: yesFrontiers in Chemistry, 2020
The opium alkaloids (morphine, codeine, thebaine, noscapine, and papaverine) have been detected on poppy seeds; they are widely used by the food industry for decoration and flavor but can introduce opium alkaloids into the food chain.
Michelle G Carlin, John R Dean
exaly   +2 more sources

Opium use and risk of lung cancer: A multicenter case‐control study in Iran

International Journal of Cancer, 2022
Opium use was recently classified as a human carcinogen for lung cancer by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. We conducted a large, multicenter case‐control study evaluating the association between opium use and the risk of lung cancer.
H. Rashidian   +33 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Opium, Street Opium, and Cancer Risk

Current Pharmaceutical Design, 2022
Abstract: Opium is defined as the air-dried latex obtained by incision from the unripe capsules of Papaver somniferum L. Opium is a complex mixture that contains approximately 10% morphine and 2% codeine. It is commonly used to prepare opium tinctures for people with chronic diarrhea.
openaire   +2 more sources

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