Results 211 to 220 of about 51,423 (237)
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Therapeutic equivalence of mesalamine products.
Reviews in gastroenterological disorders, 2004No bioequivalence studies have been conducted for mesalamine because of differences in formulation. Based on U.S. Food and Drug Administration definitions for bioequivalence, none of these drugs can be classified as bioequivalent or therapeutically equivalent.
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[Bioequivalence and therapeutic equivalence in psychiatry].
L'Encephale, 2004Many psychotropics on the market are generic forms and essentially similar products. Bioequivalence is the method used in order to demonstrate the therapeutic equi-valence between the reference drug and the new product. The principles, methods and limits of these studies are presented and illustrated by some examples for CNS drugs.
C, Couprie, , Lacarelle, , Blin
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Therapeutic Equivalence and Bioequivalence
Journal of the Korean Medical Association, 1999Sang Goo Shin, Dong-Ryul Sohn
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White paper on the therapeutic equivalence of chemically equivalent drugs.
JAMA, 1969W B, Castle +3 more
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Therapeutic equivalence of psychotropic drugs
Pharmacological Reports, 2015Konrad Rokita +3 more
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Bioequivalence or Therapeutic Equivalence
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1986openaire +1 more source

