charcoal, use with N-acetylcysteine; acetytcysteine, use with activated charcoal ## Concomitant Use of Activated Charcoal and N-Acetylcysteine Activated charcoal is a safe, effective, inexpensive adjunct in the management of most toxic ingestions. It has the ability to adsorb a wide variety of dr
Concomitant use of activated charcoal and N-acetylcysteine
β Scribed by FP Renzi; JW Donovan; L Morgan; TG Martin
- Book ID
- 104312763
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 155 KB
- Volume
- 13
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1097-6760
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β¦ Synopsis
th e emergency medicine literature. Four of.these tests were evaluated for specificity, sensitivity, ease of performance, accuracy, reproducibility, precision, ease of interpretation, and expense. Second-and third-year emergency medicine residents were given samples of blood and were asked to perform each of 4 spot tests on the samples. They were told that the samples might or might not contain~carboxyhemoglobin. The reagents and instructions were available, but no technical assistance was given. The residents were asked to record the results of the tests and answer a questionnaire. Test results were analyzed by linear regression and for within-ru n precision. The evaluators felt that the tests were inexpensive, required a minimum of technical expeJrtise, and were easy to perform and interpret. None of the evaluators had any prior experience with carboxyhemoglobin spot tests. It was found that the available spot tests for carboxyhemoglobin, found in the literature, are unable to accurately determine clinically significant levels of carboxyhemoglobin.
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The purification of oligonucleotides for base sequence analysis often requires the separation of these materials from concentrated salt solutions, or from 7 M urea. This separation is commonly carried out by adsorption of dilute oligonucleotide solutions on columns of DEAEcellulose or DEAE-Sephadex,
## Abstract Polymerβcoated, activated charcoal granules have found considerable use for the direct detoxification of blood in cases of uraemia and drug overdose. Although polymer coating materials are presently selected for their biocompatibility, more selective polymers could be used to increase t