Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dora Nellie Richardson (1919-1998) was an organic chemist who first synthesised Tamoxifen in England in 1962. [1] She was born on 1 June 1919 and died in September 1998 in England. [2] Richardson decided to become a chemist after seeing people working in hospital laboratories while visiting her grandmother in hospital in London.
Paramount Pictures Preserved at UCLA Film and Television Archive [48] It Happened One Night: 1934 Ellie Andrews Columbia Pictures [49] Cleopatra: 1934 Cleopatra: Paramount Pictures Preserved at UCLA Film and Television Archive [50] Imitation of Life: 1934 Beatrice 'Bea' Pullman Universal Pictures [51] The Gilded Lily: 1935 Marilyn David ...
Tamoxifen, sold under the brand name Nolvadex among others, is a selective estrogen receptor modulator used to prevent breast cancer in women and men. [13] It is also being studied for other types of cancer. [13] It has been used for Albright syndrome. [14] Tamoxifen is typically taken daily by mouth for five years for breast cancer. [14]
AP Images; Bridgeman Art Library: California Digital Library: California State University, Northridge, Oviatt Library Digital Collections Camera Press: Chicago Daily News (1902–1933), collection of over 55,000 images on glass plate negatives Corbis Images: Depositphotos: Stock Images: 164,000,000+ (June 2020) Yes No Yes English (Default)+ 21 ...
N-Desmethyltamoxifen (developmental code name ICI-55,548) is a major metabolite of tamoxifen, a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM). [1] [2] N-Desmethyltamoxifen is further metabolized into endoxifen (4-hydroxy-N-desmethyltamoxifen), which is thought to be the major active form of tamoxifen in the body.
The Study of Tamoxifen and Raloxifene (STAR) is a clinical trial from the early 2000s designed determine how the drug raloxifene compares with the drug tamoxifen in reducing the incidence of breast cancer in women who are at increased risk of the disease.
Nilsson in 1946 at the Bromma, Stockholm airport. Lennart Nilsson (24 August 1922 – 28 January 2017) [1] was a Swedish photographer noted for his photographs of human embryos and other medical subjects once considered unphotographable, and more generally for his extreme macro photography.
Lange was originally a fashion photographer who worked for Vogue, Harper's Bazaar and Life magazines as well as a studio photographer at Paramount and Conde Nast in Los Angeles. [1] A few months before his death, he was named Citizen of the Year by the Topanga Chamber of Commerce. [2]