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  • Book
    edited by Paul C. Barrow.
    Contents:
    ICH S5(R2) guideline for the testing of medicinal agents / L. David Wise
    Nonclinical reproductive toxicity testing requirements for drugs, pesticides, and industrial chemicals in India and China / K.S. Rao and Jing Dong
    Developmental toxicity testing of biologics / Keith P. Hazelden
    OECD guidelines for the testing of chemicals and pesticides / Jochen Buschmann
    Teratology testing under REACH / Steve Barton
    Teratology testing of food additives / Paul C. Barrow and Francois Spezia
    Developmental toxicity testing of vaccines / Paul C. Barrow and Linda Allais
    Teratology testing of cosmetics / Francois Spézia and Paul C. Barrow
    Teratology studies in the rat / Mariline Leroy and Linda Allais
    Teratology studies in the mouse / Edward Marsden and Mariline Leroy
    Combined fertility and embryotoxicity study / Lucie Reynaud and Edward Marsden
    Teratology studies in the rabbit / Linda Allais and Lucie Reynaud
    Teratology studies in the minipig / Peter A. McAnulty
    Embryo fetal development studies in nonhuman primates / Antje Fuchs, Eberhard Buse, and Gerhard F. Weinbauer
    Enhanced pre- and postnatal development study for monoclonal antibodies / Gerhard F. Weinbauer, Joerg Luft, and Antje Fuchs
    Skeletal examination by alizarin staining / Lucie Reynaud and Audrey Jocteur-Monrozier
    Skeletal examination by double staining for ossified bone and cartilaginous tissue / Steffen Schneider
    Small animal imaging and examination by micro-CT / Sergio X. Vasquez, Neha Shah, and Alan M. Hoberman
    Fetal soft tissue examination by serial sectioning / Karon Critchell
    Fetal soft tissue examinations by microdissection / Mariline Leroy and Audrey Jocteur-Monrozier
    Soft tissue examination of the fetal rat and rabbit head by magnetic resonance imaging / Julian M. French and Neil Woodhouse
    Historical control data in reproductive and developmental toxicity studies / Eve Mylchreest and Stephen B. Harris
    Reporting of teratology studies / Paul C. Barrow and Lucie Reynaud
    Maternal toxicity / Bengt R. Danielsson
    Innovations in testing strategies in reproductive toxicology / Aldert H. Piersma
    Predictive models and computational toxicology / Thomas Knudsen, Matthew Martin, Kelly Chandler, Nicole Kleinstreuer, Richard Judson, and Nisha Sipes
    Embryonic stem cell test / Sjors H.W. Schulpen and Aldert H. Piersma
    Zebrafish teratogenicity testing / Kimberly C. Brannen, Jeffrey H. Charlap, and Elise M. Lewis
    Frog embryo teratogenesis assay on Xenopus and predictivity compared with in vivo mammalian studies / Isabelle Leconte and Isabelle Mouche
    Rat whole embryo culture assay using the dysmorphology score system / Cindy Zhang, Julie Panzica-Kelly, and Karen Augustine-Rauch
    Toxicogenomic approaches in developmental toxicology testing / Joshua F. Robinson and Aldert H. Piersma
    Validation of alternative tests for developmental and reproductive toxicology testing : an ILSI Health and Environmental Sciences Institute perspective / James H. Kim
    Regulatory assessment of reproductive toxicology data / Elizabeth Davidson
    Hazard and risk assessment of teratogenic chemicals under REACH / Wiebke Prutner
    Reproductive toxicity risk assessment for pesticides / Beate Ulbrich
    Thalidomide disaster, lessons from the past / James E. Ridings.
    Digital Access Springer 2013
  • Article
    Liu C, Hinthorn DR, Hodges GR, Harms JL, Couchonnal G, Dworzack DL.
    Rev Infect Dis. 1979 Jan-Feb;1(1):127-31.
    Single, intravenously administered doses of cefoxitin and cefamandole did not penetrate into cerebrospinal fluid of normal humans. Multiple-dose administration with or without probenecid facilitated penetration of both antibiotics into the cerebrospinal fluid. Preliminary data showed that cefoxitin penetrated into cerebrospinal fluid of patients with inflamed meninges even when administered in a single dose without probenecid. However, the concentrations of cefoxitin in the cerebrospinal fluid of the individuals studied were not within the therapeutic range.
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