enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sodium gluconate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_gluconate

    Sodium gluconate is a compound with formula NaC 6 H 11 O 7. [2] It is the sodium salt of gluconic acid.Its E number is E576. This white, water-soluble powder has a wide range of applications across industries.

  3. Sodium stibogluconate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_stibogluconate

    Sodium stibogluconate is in the pentavalent antimonials class of medication. [5] Sodium stibogluconate has been studied as early as 1937 and has been in medical use since the 1940s. [8] [9] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. [10] In the United States, it is available from the Centers for Disease Control. [3]

  4. ATC code B05 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATC_code_B05

    ATC code B05 Blood substitutes and perfusion solutions is a therapeutic subgroup of the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System, a system of alphanumeric codes developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) for the classification of drugs and other medical products.

  5. List of herbs with known adverse effects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_herbs_with_known...

    "Potentiates digitalis activity, increases coronary dilation effects of theophylline, caffeine, papaverine, sodium nitrate, adenosine and epinephrine, increase barbiturate-induced sleeping times" [3] Horse chestnut: conker tree, conker Aesculus hippocastanum: Liver toxicity, allergic reaction, anaphylaxis [3] Kava: awa, kava-kava [4] Piper ...

  6. Salt poisoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_poisoning

    Death results by the swelling of the brain against the skull. (Normal serum sodium levels are 135–145 mEq/liter (135–145 mmol/L). Severe symptoms typically only occur when levels are above 160 mEq/L.) The human renal system actively regulates sodium chloride in the blood within a very narrow range around 9 g/L (0.9% by weight). [citation ...

  7. Financial toxicity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_toxicity

    The term financial toxicity was used in a 2009 article about the cancer drug industry "as a side effect of cancer drug treatment, along with nausea and hair loss". [5]The cost of medical treatment has become a major complication of treatment in the United States, leading to suffering comparable to physical suffering and damaging a person's ability to recover from their illness, according to a ...

  8. Gluconic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluconic_acid

    Gluconate is also an electrolyte present in certain solutions, such as "plasmalyte a", used for intravenous fluid resuscitation. [20] Quinine gluconate is a salt of gluconic acid and quinine, which is used for intramuscular injection in the treatment of malaria. Ferrous gluconate injections have been proposed in the past to treat anemia. [21]

  9. Iron preparation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_preparation

    [6] [7] The process of iron toxicity is divided into four clinical stages, which are gastrointestinal damage, improvement in condition, metabolic acidosis and hepatic failure, and intestinal obstruction due to scarring. [8] [9] Whole bowel irrigation and iron chelation are used in the treatment of iron poisoning. [10]