Results 261 to 270 of about 60,113 (306)
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The Tetracyclines

American Journal of Diseases of Children, 1966
THE TETRACYCLINES were used quite extensively in clinical practice for almost a decade after their introduction before a significant number of specific references to the adverse effects of these drugs began to appear in the medical literature.
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Chloramphenicol and Tetracyclines

Medical Clinics of North America, 1987
Tetracyclines have a broad range of clinical usefulness because of their broad antimicrobial spectrum of activity. For most routine gram positive and gram negative infections, alternative agents are available, but for Chlamydiae, Rickettsiae, Brucella, and Borrelia they still remain agents of choice.
E L, Francke, H C, Neu
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Tetracyclines in ophthalmology

Survey of Ophthalmology, 1985
Tetracycline and its congeners demonstrate antimicrobial activity against bacteria, Chlamydiae and Toxoplasma gondii. Ophthalmologists can use these drugs to treat bacterial and chlamydial infections, and also for ocular rosacea and similar disorders.
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The tetracyclines in dermatology

Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1991
Tetracycline is one of the most widely used antibiotics. It may share some properties with conventional immunosuppressive drugs and act as an anti-inflammatory agent in the treatment of inflammatory disease. This article reviews cutaneous diseases that have been treated with tetracyclines and their antiinflammatory and immunosuppressive properties.
P, Humbert   +5 more
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Dehydration of Tetracycline

Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1975
The dehydration of tetracycline at the C-5a-C-6 position as a function of acidity was investigated at various temperatures. The rate was first order with respect to tetracycline and with respect to [H+]. Rate constants and an activation energy are reported. Tetracycline was unstable in dilute acid.
K D, Schlecht, C W, Frank
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Tetracyclines and pain

Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology, 2012
Tetracyclines are natural or semi-synthetic bacteriostatic agents which have been used since late 1940s against a wide range of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria and atypical organisms such as chlamydia, mycoplasmas, rickettsia, and protozoan parasites.
Leandro F S, Bastos   +4 more
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Antigenicity of the tetracyclines

Journal of Allergy, 1965
Abstract Specific antisera to oxytetracycline were produced in rabbits. The antibody was shown to be in the globulin fraction by DEAE-Sephadex separation. Its activity was demonstrated by tanned-cell hemagglutination, hemagglutination-inhibition, and the Schultz-Dale smooth muscle contraction phenomenon.
J T, Queng, C D, Dukes, J P, McGovern
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TETRACYCLINE

The Lancet, 1955
R L, McCORRY, J A, WEAVER
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Tetracycline in Pregnancy?

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1971
Excerpt To the editor: The article, "Disseminated Gonococcal Infection," by Drs. Holmes, Counts, and Beaty in the June 1971 ANNALSraises an interesting question.
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