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  2. Intramuscular injection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intramuscular_injection

    Intramuscular injection, often abbreviated IM, is the injection of a substance into a muscle. In medicine , it is one of several methods for parenteral administration of medications. Intramuscular injection may be preferred because muscles have larger and more numerous blood vessels than subcutaneous tissue, leading to faster absorption than ...

  3. Intracerebroventricular injection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intracerebroventricular...

    Image showing the brain's ventricular system. Intracerebroventricular injection (often abbreviated as ICV injection) is a route of administration for drugs via injection into the cerebral ventricles so that it reaches the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). This route of administration is often used to bypass the blood-brain barrier because it can ...

  4. Drug delivery to the brain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_delivery_to_the_brain

    Drug delivery to the brain. Drug delivery to the brain is the process of passing therapeutically active molecules across the blood–brain barrier into the brain. This is a complex process that must take into account the complex anatomy of the brain as well as the restrictions imposed by the special junctions of the blood–brain barrier.

  5. Intrathecal administration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intrathecal_administration

    Intrathecal administration is a route of administration for drugs via an injection into the spinal canal, or into the subarachnoid space so that it reaches the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). It is useful in several applications, such as for spinal anesthesia, chemotherapy, or pain management. This route is also used to introduce drugs that fight ...

  6. Gluteal sulcus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluteal_sulcus

    The gluteal sulcus (also known as the gluteal fold, tuck, fold of the buttock,, horizontal gluteal crease, or gluteal furrow) is an area of the body of humans and anthropoid apes, described by a horizontal crease formed by the inferior aspect of the buttocks and the posterior upper thigh. [1] The gluteal sulcus is formed by the posterior ...

  7. Route of administration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Route_of_administration

    The term injection encompasses intravenous (IV), intramuscular (IM), subcutaneous (SC) and intradermal (ID) administration. [35] Parenteral administration generally acts more rapidly than topical or enteral administration, with onset of action often occurring in 15–30 seconds for IV, 10–20 minutes for IM and 15–30 minutes for SC. [36]

  8. Neurogenic claudication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurogenic_claudication

    Neurogenic claudication (NC), also known as pseudoclaudication, is the most common symptom of lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) and describes intermittent leg pain from impingement of the nerves emanating from the spinal cord. [1][2] Neurogenic means that the problem originates within the nervous system. Claudication, from Latin claudicare 'to limp ...

  9. Pharmacokinetics of estradiol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharmacokinetics_of_estradiol

    Intramuscular injections are injections into muscle, for instance the gluteal or deltoid muscle. Estradiol and estradiol esters can be administered in a variety of forms by intramuscular injection. [ 270 ] [ 10 ] [ 271 ] Aqueous solutions of estradiol and estradiol esters by intramuscular injection have a rapid onset and duration analogously to ...