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Summary Of: Quinine

Quinine was the first effective treatment for... although quinine is still used to treat the disease in certain critical situations... Quinine is available with a prescription in the... Quinine is also used to treat... Quinine and interactions with other diseases... Quinine and hearing impairment... Quinine contains two major fused... The correct form of quinine best used to treat malaria was found by... Quinine was extracted from the bark of the... Quinine was first used to treat malaria in Rome in 1631... quinine is an effective muscle relaxant... Quinine also played a significant role in the colonization of Africa by Europeans... Quinine was the prime reason why Africa ceased to be known as the white man... Quinine is a basic... This makes quinine dosing very complicated... quinine base 100 mg... quinine bisulfate 169 mg... quinine dihydrochloride 122 mg... quinine hydrochloride 122 mg... quinine gluconate 160 mg... All quinine salts may be given orally or... quinine gluconate may also be given... The IV dose of quinine is 8 mg... kg of quinine base every eight hours... kg of quinine base twice daily... kg of quinine base twice daily... Quinine is not licensed for IM or PR use in the... adult dose in the UK is 600 mg quinine dihydrochloride IV or 600 mg quinine sulfate orally every eight hours... In the United States quinine sulfate is available as 324 mg tablets under the brand name Qualaquin... There is no injectable preparation of quinine licensed in the U... Quinine is not recommended for malaria prevention... the dose of quinine sulfate is 300... It is usual for quinine in therapeutic doses to cause... is not a reason for stopping or interrupting quinine therapy and the patient should be reassured... levels and electrolyte concentrations must be monitored when quinine is given by injection... ideally be in cardiac monitoring when the first quinine injection is given... Cinchonism is much less common when quinine is given by mouth... but oral quinine is not well tolerated... quinine is exceedingly bitter and many patients will vomit after ingesting quinine tablets... electrolyte and cardiac monitoring are not necessary when quinine is given by mouth... Quinine can cause paralysis if accidentally injected into a nerve... Quinine and interactions with other diseases... Quinine and interactions with other diseases... and the physician should not hesitate to use quinine in patients with... Quinine can also cause... Quinine can cause abnormal heart rhythms and should be avoided if possible in patients with... Quinine must not be used in patients with... Quinine and hearing impairment... Quinine and hearing impairment... quinine as a treatment for nocturnal leg cramps... label use of quinine to treat leg cramps... Quinine is approved for treatment of malaria... the risks associated with quinine use are justified for that condition... Quinine is a flavour component of... malarial quinine tonic led British colonials in... quinine is limited to between 83... In order to achieve a therapeutic dose of quinine from tonic water... quinine is an ingredient of an... quinine is also used in... Quinine is often added to street drugs cocaine or ketamine in order to... quinine is an ingredient in the... quinine is an ingredient in... quinine is an ingredient of a... quinine is an ingredient of a Clifton Instant Drink named Chikree produced by Tiger Food Brands... Efficacy and pharmacokinetics of a new intrarectal quinine formulation in children with Plasmodium falciparum malaria... Safety and efficacy of rectal compared with intramuscular quinine for the early treatment of moderately severe malaria in children... FDA Orders Stop to Marketing Of Quinine for Night Leg Cramps... FDA Orders Unapproved Quinine Drugs from the Market and Cautions Consumers About Off... Label Use of Quinine to Treat Leg Cramps... Summary article on history of Quinine in Chemical and Engineering News...

Encyclodia Page On: Quinine

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| | IUPAC | CAS number | ATC code | M09 | P01 | PubChem | DrugBank | Formula | C | H | N | O | Mol. mass | g | mol | Melt. point | Bioavailability | Protein binding | Metabolism | Hepatic | CYP3A4 | CYP2C19 | Half life | Excretion | Renal | Pregnancy cat. | USA | Au | Legal status | Routes | intravenous | /ˈkwaɪnaɪn, kwɪˈniːn, ˈkwiːniːn/ | crystalline | alkaloid | antipyretic | antimalarial | analgesic | anti-inflammatory | stereoisomer | quinidine | malaria | Plasmodium falciparum | United States | nocturnal leg cramps | arthritis | prion | heroin | adulterant | King Louis XIV | aromatic | quinoline | bicyclic | quinuclidine | hemozoin | biocrystallization | cytotoxic | heme | Charles Marie de La Condamine | 1737 | South American | cinchona | 1817 | Pierre Joseph Pelletier | Joseph Bienaimé Caventou | Quechua | prophylaxis | 1850 | 1600s | swamps | marshes | Rome | Popes | Cardinals | priests | shivering | Quechua | Peru | Jesuit | apothecary | Lima | cinchona | socialist | Gold Coast | Nigeria | quinine total synthesis | Cinchona trees | 1944 | R.B. Woodward | W.E. Doering | quinine total syntheses | amine | hydrochloride | sulfate | gluconate | intravenously | intramuscularly | UK | quinidine | cinchonism | cinchonism | pulmonary edema | sulfadoxine | pyrimethamine | proguanil | atovaquone | poisons specialist | falciparum | hemolysis | G6PD deficiency | G6PD deficiency | drug-induced | immune thrombocytopenic purpura | atrial fibrillation | heart block | hemoglobinuria | myasthenia gravis | optic neuritis | hearing impairment | 1969 | 1992 | U.S. | Food and Drug Administration | 1994 | over-the-counter | Pfizer | Pharmaceuticals | Tonic water, in normal light and UV. | | tonic water | bitter lemon | vermouth | India | gin | gin and tonic | Remijia | Cinchona | tonic water | United States | Germany | parts per million | France | apéritif | Quinquina | fluorescence | quantum yield | photochemistry | standard | Sharpless asymmetric dihydroxylation | Canada | carbonated | chinotto | beverage | Brio | United Kingdom | A.G. Barr's | ingredient | caffeinated | Irn-Bru | England | Australia | New Zealand | Schweppes | Tonic waters | Uruguay | Argentina | Pepsico | Tonic water | Paso de los Toros | South Africa | J Am Chem Soc | doi | doi | 2006 | 05-06 | doi | 2008 | 02-15 | 2008 | 02-15 | Academia | ISBN 80-200-1179-X | 2008 | 06-21 | Pharmacology | Luis Jerónimo Fernández de Cabrera | Jesuit's bark | Alcohol and Drugs History Society | v | Antiparasitic | Antiprotozoals | Antimalarial drugs | P01B | Aminoquinolines | 4-Aminoquinoline | Amodiaquine | Chloroquine | Hydroxychloroquine | 8-Aminoquinoline | Pamaquine | Primaquine | Methanolquinolines | Mefloquine | Biguanides | Proguanil | Cycloguanil | antifolate | Pyrimethamine | Artemisinin | Artemisinin | Artemether | Artesunate | Artenimol | Arteether/Artemotil | Halofantrine | Lumefantrine | Categories | Ethers | Quinine | Teratogens | Antimalarial agents | Quinolines | Bitter compounds | Abortifacients | Quinuclidines | World Health Organization essential medicines |
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