Drilldown: Medicines
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Use the filters below to narrow your results.
generic:
None (10) ·
(none, never marketed) (1) ·
Akineton (1) ·
Apokyn (1) ·
Artane (1) ·
Azilect (1) ·
Bicillin L-A (benzathine), Bicillin C-R (combination procaine + benzathine), Pfizerpen (potassium IV) (1) ·
Cogentin (1) ·
Comtan (1) ·
Dalmane (1) ·
Doral (1) ·
Doriden (1) ·
Dostinex (1) ·
Eldepryl (1) ·
Halcion (1) ·
Hetlioz (1) ·
Imovane (1) ·
Lunesta (1) ·
Mogadon (1) ·
Nembutal (1) ·
Neupro (1) ·
Ongentys (1) ·
Parlodel (1) ·
Pen-V, Veetids (mostly generic) (1) ·
Placidyl (1) ·
ProSom (1) ·
Quaalude (1) ·
Restoril (1) ·
Rohypnol (1) ·
Rozerem (1) ·
Seconal (1) ·
Sinemet (1) ·
Sonata (1) ·
Symmetrel (1) ·
Tasmar (1) ·
THIP (1) ·
Versed (1) ·
Xadago (1) ·
Xyrem (1)
None (4) ·
Central and peripheral COMT inhibitor (1) ·
D1/D2/D3 receptor agonist (1) ·
D2 agonist; D1 partial agonist (1) ·
D2 receptor agonist (1) ·
Dopamine precursor (1) ·
Dopamine precursor + DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor (1) ·
Extremely potent GABAA positive allosteric modulator (1) ·
GABAA positive allosteric modulator (15) ·
GABAA positive allosteric modulator (non-benzodiazepine) (3) ·
GABAA positive allosteric modulator; very long half-life (1) ·
GABAA potentiator (1) ·
GABAA potentiator and direct activator (2) ·
GABAB agonist; GHB receptor agonist (1) ·
Irreversible selective MAO-B inhibitor (2) ·
MAO-B inhibitor; sodium channel blocker; glutamate release inhibitor (1) ·
Melatonin receptor agonist (2) ·
Muscarinic receptor antagonist (1) ·
Muscarinic receptor antagonist; dopamine reuptake inhibitor (1) ·
NMDA antagonist; dopamine releasing agent (1) ·
Non-selective dopamine receptor agonist (1) ·
Once-daily COMT inhibitor (1) ·
Peripheral COMT inhibitor (1) ·
Positive allosteric modulator of the GABA<sub>A</sub> receptor at the benzodiazepine binding site; increases frequency of Cl<sup>−</sup> channel opening, producing anxiolytic, sedative, hypnotic, anticonvulsant, and skeletal-muscle relaxant effects. (1) ·
Selective GABAA agonist (extrasynaptic delta subunit) (1) ·
Selective M1 muscarinic antagonist (1)
None (45) ·
No approved medical problem. Encountered as a designer/research benzodiazepine and, increasingly, as an adulterant in illicit opioid supplies. (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-00000E71-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00000E72-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00000E73-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00000E74-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00000E75-QINU`"' (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-00001414-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00001415-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00001416-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00001417-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00001418-QINU`"' (1)
None (45) ·
Acid-labile; not effective orally (oral form available outside US as penicillin G salts but penicillin V is preferred for oral use)'"`UNIQ--ref-0000141A-QINU`"' (1) ·
Not formally characterized in humans. (1) ·
~60% (oral; phenoxymethyl modification makes it acid-stable, unlike penicillin G which is destroyed by gastric acid)'"`UNIQ--ref-00000E77-QINU`"' (1)
None (45) ·
Avoid. Benzodiazepines are associated with neonatal sedation, floppy-infant syndrome, and withdrawal; teratogenic signal weak but non-zero. Designer benzo with no safety data, assume worst-case. (1) ·
Generally considered safe; widely used.<sup class="pcp-cn" title="This claim needs a citation.">[[[Pharmacopedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]]</sup> (1) ·
Penicillin G is the only fully effective syphilis treatment in pregnancy; penicillin-allergic pregnant patients require desensitization.<sup class="pcp-cn" title="This claim needs a citation.">[[[Pharmacopedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]]</sup> (1)
Showing below up to 48 results in range #1 to #48.


