Results 211 to 220 of about 3,521 (321)
Reduce, Refine, Replace: The Failure of the Three R’s and the Future of Animal Experimentation
Ibrahim, Darian M.
core
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ATROPINE-LIKE POISONING DUE TO TRANQUILIZING AGENTS
American Journal of Psychiatry, 1958A case of atropine-like poisoning manifested by absence of sweating, hyperthermia, pupillary paralysis, dry mucous membranes, and delirium, is reported. These findings are ascribed to the anticholinergic properties of the tranquilizing agents of the phenothiazine group of drugs.
P R, MAHRER, P S, BERGMAN, S, ESTREN
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Tranquilizing Agents for Nervous Disorders in General Practice
F. Garm Norbury
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DESIGNATION OF "TRANQUILIZING AGENTS" IN NEUROPHARMACOLOGY
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1955To the Editor:— An already overburdened glossary provokes misgivings in anyone who proposes to coin a new term. There are occasions, however, when new experience calls for a word to encompass it. Recent clinical use of chlorpromazine and the Rauwolfia fractions has demonstrated that these new compounds are capable of producing amelioration of a wide ...
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[A new generation of tranquilizing agents].
La Revue du praticien, 1995The newer anxiolytics include compounds whose the molecular structure, the mechanisms, and the pharmacological properties are heterogeneous. Nevertheless, the most of them have clinical and adverse effects like to the most known: buspirone, after the commercial shrinking for hepatic toxicity of alpidem.
M, Escande, M, Frexinos, S, Fabre
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Molecular imaging in oncology: Current impact and future directions
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022Steven P Rowe, Martin G Pomper
exaly

