Drilldown: Medicines
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Empathogen
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Neuroleptic
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[[:Category:Hormone_replacement|Hormone replacement]] 
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Empathogen
or
Neuroleptic
or
[[:Category:Hormone_replacement|Hormone replacement]] 
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4-FA (1) ·
5-APB (1) ·
5-MAPB (1) ·
6-APB (1) ·
6-APDB (1) ·
Asenapine (1) ·
Butylone (1) ·
Chlorpromazine (1) ·
Clozapine (1) ·
Droperidol (1) ·
Ephylone (1) ·
Ethylone (1) ·
Fluphenazine (1) ·
Iloperidone (1) ·
Levothyroxine (1) ·
Liothyronine (T3, triiodothyronine sodium) (1) ·
Loxapine (1) ·
Lurasidone (1) ·
MDA (1) ·
MDAI (1) ·
MDEA (1) ·
MDMA (1) ·
Mephedrone (1) ·
Methylone (1) ·
Molindone (1) ·
Paliperidone (1) ·
Perphenazine (1) ·
Pimozide (1) ·
PMA (1) ·
PMMA (1) ·
Thioridazine (1) ·
Thiothixene (1) ·
Thyroid (desiccated) (1) ·
Trifluoperazine (1) ·
Ziprasidone (1)
None (16) ·
Armour Thyroid, NP Thyroid, Nature-Throid, WP Thyroid (1) ·
Clozaril (1) ·
Cytomel (oral), Triostat (IV) (1) ·
Fanapt (1) ·
Geodon (1) ·
Inapsine (1) ·
Invega (1) ·
Latuda (1) ·
Loxitane (1) ·
Mellaril (1) ·
Moban (1) ·
Navane (1) ·
Orap (1) ·
Prolixin (1) ·
Saphris (1) ·
Stelazine (1) ·
Synthroid, Levoxyl, Tirosint, Unithroid, Euthyrox (1) ·
Thorazine (1) ·
Trilafon (1)
None (1) ·
Butyrophenone D2 antagonist (1) ·
D2 receptor antagonist; also H1, alpha-1, muscarinic antagonist (1) ·
D2/5-HT2A antagonist (1) ·
D2/5-HT2A antagonist; 5-HT7 antagonist (1) ·
D2/5-HT2A antagonist; active metabolite of risperidone (1) ·
D2/5-HT2A antagonist; SRI and NRI (1) ·
Dibenzoxazepine D2/5-HT2 antagonist (1) ·
Dihydroindolone D2 antagonist (1) ·
Diphenylbutylpiperidine D2 antagonist (1) ·
MAO inhibitor; monoamine releasing agent (1) ·
MAO inhibitor; serotonin releasing agent (1) ·
Monoamine releasing agent (3) ·
Monoamine releasing agent; 5-HT2A agonist (1) ·
Monoamine releasing agent; serotonergic at higher doses (1) ·
Multi-receptor antagonist (D2, 5-HT2A, H1, alpha) (1) ·
Multi-receptor antagonist; low D2 affinity (1) ·
Phenothiazine D2 antagonist (4) ·
Serotonin releasing agent (2) ·
Serotonin releasing agent; 5-HT2A agonist (3) ·
Serotonin/dopamine/norepinephrine releasing agent; 5-HT2A agonist (1) ·
Serotonin/norepinephrine/dopamine releasing agent (3) ·
Synthetic T4 (thyroxine); peripherally deiodinated to T3 (triiodothyronine), the active hormone. '"`UNIQ--vote-00000031-QINU`"' Narrow therapeutic index; brand-to-generic switches can shift TSH and require re-titration'"`UNIQ--ref-00000032-QINU`"'. (1) ·
Thioxanthene D2 antagonist (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-00000032-QINU`"' Brand-to-brand and lot-to-lot variability in T3:T4 ratio is greater than with synthetic levothyroxine, which is why endocrine guidelines prefer the synthetic'"`UNIQ--ref-00000033-QINU`"'. (1)
None (32) ·
1.6 mcg/kg/d in young healthy adults; 25-50 mcg/d in elderly or cardiac disease, titrated by TSH at 6-8 weeks (1) ·
30 mg PO daily (1/2 grain); titrate by TSH at 6-8 weeks; 60 mg desiccated thyroid is approximately equivalent to 88-100 mcg levothyroxine (1) ·
Hypothyroidism: 5-25 mcg PO daily (start low, titrate slowly); myxedema coma: 5-20 mcg IV q4-12h with T4 loading (1)
None (32) ·
First-line in pregnancy; dose typically increased 25-30% due to estrogen-driven rise in TBG and fetal demand. Lactation safe at physiologic doses.<sup class="pcp-cn" title="This claim needs a citation.">[[[Pharmacopedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]]</sup> (1) ·
Synthetic levothyroxine is the standard-of-care in pregnancy; desiccated thyroid use in pregnancy is not well studied<sup class="pcp-cn" title="This claim needs a citation.">[[[Pharmacopedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]]</sup> (1) ·
T4 (levothyroxine) is the first-line in pregnancy; T3 is rarely needed.<sup class="pcp-cn" title="This claim needs a citation.">[[[Pharmacopedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]]</sup> (1)
Showing below up to 35 results in range #1 to #35.

