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Drugs and infants -- See Infants Effect of drugs on


  1
Drugs and literature.   5
Drugs and literature -- Congresses : Narcoficciones en México y Colombia / Brigitte Adriaensen y Marco Kunz (eds.)  2016 1
Drugs and mass media.   8
Drugs and mass media -- Australia.   4
Drugs and mass media -- United States.   5
Drugs and mass media -- United States -- Congresses : Communication campaigns about drugs : government, media, and the public / edited by Pamela J. Shoemaker  1989 1
Drugs and motion pictures. : High anxieties : cultural studies in addiction / Janet Farrell Brodie and Marc Redfield, editors  2002 1
Victoria. Premier's Drug Advisory Council. Drugs and our community : report of the Premier's Drug Advisory Council, March 1996 : Turning the tide : Victorian Government response to the report of the Premier's Drug Advisory Council, June 1996 / State Government of Victoria  1996 1
Drugs and pharmaceuticals : Choices & change : microeconomics. Lesson 5, Elasticity. Part 4 / producer/director Ken Harrison  2000 1
Drugs and popular music. : Loved up  1995 1
Drugs and popular music -- Great Britain. : Dancing on drugs : risk, health and hedonism in the British club scene / Fiona Measham, Judith Aldridge, Howard Parker  2000 1
Drugs and popular music -- Great Britain -- Drama : Loved up  1995 1
 

Drugs and reproduction -- See Reproduction Effect of drugs on


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Drugs and sex -- See Also Date rape drugs


Here are entered works on drugs that make people more susceptible to sexual assault and/or that facilitate nonconsensual sexual intercourse
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Drugs and sex   16
Drugs and sex -- Australia : Abandoned : the sad death of Dianne Brimble / Geesche Jacobsen  2010 1
Drugs and sex -- Juvenile literature. : Drugs & sexual behavior / Joann Ellison Rodgers  1988 1
Drugs and sex -- United States   2
 

Drugs and state -- See Pharmaceutical policy


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Drugs and the arts. : Drugs & the arts / Marc Kusinitz  1987 1
Drugs and the arts -- Juvenile literature. : Drugs & the arts / Marc Kusinitz  1987 1
  Drugs and youth -- 3 Related Subjects   3
 

Drugs, Anesthetic -- See Anesthetics


Agents that are capable of inducing a total or partial loss of sensation, especially tactile sensation and pain. They may act to induce general ANESTHESIA, in which an unconscious state is achieved, or may act locally to induce numbness or lack of sensation at a targeted site
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Drugs, Anti-AIDS -- See Anti-HIV Agents


Agents used to treat AIDS and/or stop the spread of the HIV infection. These do not include drugs used to treat symptoms or opportunistic infections associated with AIDS
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Drugs, Anti-Allergy -- See Anti-Allergic Agents


Agents that are used to treat allergic reactions. Most of these drugs act by preventing the release of inflammatory mediators or inhibiting the actions of released mediators on their target cells. (From AMA Drug Evaluations Annual, 1994, p475)
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Drugs, Anti-Angiogenic -- See Angiogenesis Inhibitors


Agents and endogenous substances that antagonize or inhibit the development of new blood vessels
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Drugs, Anti-Anxiety -- See Anti-Anxiety Agents


Agents that alleviate ANXIETY, tension, and ANXIETY DISORDERS, promote sedation, and have a calming effect without affecting clarity of consciousness or neurologic conditions. ADRENERGIC BETA-ANTAGONISTS are commonly used in the symptomatic treatment of anxiety but are not included here
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Drugs, Anti-Arrhythmia -- See Anti-Arrhythmia Agents


Agents used for the treatment or prevention of cardiac arrhythmias. They may affect the polarization-repolarization phase of the action potential, its excitability or refractoriness, or impulse conduction or membrane responsiveness within cardiac fibers. Anti-arrhythmia agents are often classed into four main groups according to their mechanism of action: sodium channel blockade, beta-adrenergic blockade, repolarization prolongation, or calcium channel blockade
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Drugs, Anti-Asthmatic -- See Anti-Asthmatic Agents


Drugs that are used to treat asthma
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Drugs, Anti-Carcinogenic -- See Anticarcinogenic Agents


Agents that reduce the frequency or rate of spontaneous or induced tumors independently of the mechanism involved
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Drugs, Anti-HIV -- See Anti-HIV Agents


Agents used to treat AIDS and/or stop the spread of the HIV infection. These do not include drugs used to treat symptoms or opportunistic infections associated with AIDS
  1
 

Drugs, Anti-Hypertensive -- See Antihypertensive Agents


Drugs used in the treatment of acute or chronic vascular HYPERTENSION regardless of pharmacological mechanism. Among the antihypertensive agents are DIURETICS; (especially DIURETICS, THIAZIDE); ADRENERGIC BETA-ANTAGONISTS; ADRENERGIC ALPHA-ANTAGONISTS; ANGIOTENSIN-CONVERTING ENZYME INHIBITORS; CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS; GANGLIONIC BLOCKERS; and VASODILATOR AGENTS
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Drugs, Anti-Obesity -- See Anti-Obesity Agents


Agents that increase energy expenditure and weight loss by neural and metabolic regulation
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Drugs, Antiallergic -- See Anti-Allergic Agents


Agents that are used to treat allergic reactions. Most of these drugs act by preventing the release of inflammatory mediators or inhibiting the actions of released mediators on their target cells. (From AMA Drug Evaluations Annual, 1994, p475)
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Drugs, Antiarrhythmia -- See Anti-Arrhythmia Agents


Agents used for the treatment or prevention of cardiac arrhythmias. They may affect the polarization-repolarization phase of the action potential, its excitability or refractoriness, or impulse conduction or membrane responsiveness within cardiac fibers. Anti-arrhythmia agents are often classed into four main groups according to their mechanism of action: sodium channel blockade, beta-adrenergic blockade, repolarization prolongation, or calcium channel blockade
  1
 

Drugs, Antiarrhythmic -- See Anti-Arrhythmia Agents


Agents used for the treatment or prevention of cardiac arrhythmias. They may affect the polarization-repolarization phase of the action potential, its excitability or refractoriness, or impulse conduction or membrane responsiveness within cardiac fibers. Anti-arrhythmia agents are often classed into four main groups according to their mechanism of action: sodium channel blockade, beta-adrenergic blockade, repolarization prolongation, or calcium channel blockade
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Drugs, Antiasthmatic -- See Anti-Asthmatic Agents


Drugs that are used to treat asthma
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Drugs, Anticarcinogenic -- See Anticarcinogenic Agents


Agents that reduce the frequency or rate of spontaneous or induced tumors independently of the mechanism involved
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Drugs, Anticholesteremic -- See Anticholesteremic Agents


Substances used to lower plasma CHOLESTEROL levels
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Drugs, Anticoagulant -- See Anticoagulants


Agents that prevent BLOOD CLOTTING
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Drugs, Anticonvulsant -- See Anticonvulsants


Drugs used to prevent SEIZURES or reduce their severity
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Drugs, Anticonvulsive -- See Anticonvulsants


Drugs used to prevent SEIZURES or reduce their severity
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Drugs, Antidepressant -- See Antidepressive Agents


Mood-stimulating drugs used primarily in the treatment of affective disorders and related conditions. Several MONOAMINE OXIDASE INHIBITORS are useful as antidepressants apparently as a long-term consequence of their modulation of catecholamine levels. The tricyclic compounds useful as antidepressive agents (ANTIDEPRESSIVE AGENTS, TRICYCLIC) also appear to act through brain catecholamine systems. A third group (ANTIDEPRESSIVE AGENTS, SECOND-GENERATION) is a diverse group of drugs including some that act specifically on serotonergic systems
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Drugs, Antidiabetic -- See Hypoglycemic Agents


Substances which lower blood glucose levels
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Drugs, Antiemetic -- See Antiemetics


Drugs used to prevent NAUSEA or VOMITING
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Drugs, Antiepileptic -- See Anticonvulsants


Drugs used to prevent SEIZURES or reduce their severity
  1
 

Drugs, Antihypertensive -- See Antihypertensive Agents


Drugs used in the treatment of acute or chronic vascular HYPERTENSION regardless of pharmacological mechanism. Among the antihypertensive agents are DIURETICS; (especially DIURETICS, THIAZIDE); ADRENERGIC BETA-ANTAGONISTS; ADRENERGIC ALPHA-ANTAGONISTS; ANGIOTENSIN-CONVERTING ENZYME INHIBITORS; CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS; GANGLIONIC BLOCKERS; and VASODILATOR AGENTS
  1
 

Drugs, Antilipemic -- See Hypolipidemic Agents


Substances that lower the levels of certain LIPIDS in the BLOOD. They are used to treat HYPERLIPIDEMIAS
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Drugs, Antimalarial -- See Antimalarials


Agents used in the treatment of malaria. They are usually classified on the basis of their action against plasmodia at different stages in their life cycle in the human. (From AMA, Drug Evaluations Annual, 1992, p1585)
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