Results 241 to 250 of about 30,643 (283)
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Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1990
Patients intoxicated with phencyclidine (PCP) present both diagnostic and management dilemmas. The clinical presentation ranges from coma to severe agitation and violence; disorientation, psychosis, catatonia and bizarre behavior can be seen. Patients are at-risk for significant medical complications such as rhabdomyolysis, seizures, and hyperthermia ...
E B, Baldridge, H A, Bessen
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Patients intoxicated with phencyclidine (PCP) present both diagnostic and management dilemmas. The clinical presentation ranges from coma to severe agitation and violence; disorientation, psychosis, catatonia and bizarre behavior can be seen. Patients are at-risk for significant medical complications such as rhabdomyolysis, seizures, and hyperthermia ...
E B, Baldridge, H A, Bessen
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Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians, 1978
The potential for a pharmacologic "overdose" and the cause of death associated with phencyclidine abuse is discussed. Nineteen deaths associated exclusively with phencyclidine intoxication have been documented. In 13 cases the immediate cause of death was asphyxia by drowning or trauma with lower levels of phencyclidine present suggesting behavioral ...
R S, Burns, S E, Lerner
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The potential for a pharmacologic "overdose" and the cause of death associated with phencyclidine abuse is discussed. Nineteen deaths associated exclusively with phencyclidine intoxication have been documented. In 13 cases the immediate cause of death was asphyxia by drowning or trauma with lower levels of phencyclidine present suggesting behavioral ...
R S, Burns, S E, Lerner
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Phencyclidine and phenylcyclohexene disposition after smoking phencyclidine
Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 1982Five men who smoked parsley cigarettes containing 100 micrograms of [3H]-phencyclidine hydrochloride (PCP.HCl) inhaled 69 +/- 5(SEM) % of the total radioactivity in the cigarette. Both PCP and its pyrolysis product, 1-phenylcyclohexene (PC), were found and measured in plasma. Calculations based on the assumption that the ratio of these two products was
C E, Cook +4 more
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Phencyclidine (Sernylan) poisoning
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1973Case 1. A 3-year-old white boy presented to the emergency ward approximately two hours after ingesting three tablets described by his parents as "tranquilizers." The patient became quite lethargic 1 89 hours after ingestion and then rapidly progressed to an unresponsive state.
William L. Nyhan +4 more
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