The tragic spectacle of thousands of infants born with deformed arms and legs at the beginning of the 1960s stunned the entire globe. The public's memory has been permanently scarred by the sight of those young people struggling with limb deformities. The medicine thalidomide, which pregnant women use for morning sickness and insomnia, was found to be responsible for the deformities in limbs and other organs. Thalidomide was sold in over 40 nations and was authorised for prescription usage in Canada from April 1961 to March 1962. Although the true number was likely greater due to spontaneous miscarriages and stillbirths, it resulted in around 115 occurrences of deformities in this country.Due to its expulsion from the medical toolbox, this...
Thalidomide is in many ways the archetypal drug of our era. Produced in the mid 1950s by the German ...
Thalidomide has several mechanisms of action: several immuno-modulatory properties, an anti-angiogen...
Thanks go to Dr. Chris Mahony, Prof. Martin Collinson, Shaunna-Leigh Beedie and Alexandra Diamond fo...
Thalidomide (-phthalimido-glutarimide), a hypnotic sedative and anxiolytic with anti-emetic properti...
Thalidomide, first synthesized in 1953, was widely prescribed for morning sickness of pregnant women...
The Titanic has become a metaphor for the disastrous consequences of an unqualified belief in the sa...
This paper attempts to give a brief history of the drug Thalidomide, from its initial market success...
Thalidomide was first introduced in 1953 as an oral sedative-hypnotic [1], and was used to ameliorat...
Background: In the late 1950s and early 1960s the drug Thalidomide was given to thousands of pregnan...
Thalidomide has several targets and mechanisms of action: a hypnosedative effect, several immunomodu...
Acknowledgements Thanks to members of the Thalidomide Society for helpful discussions on thalidomide...
Thalidomide (TD) is the drug in clinical use since over half a century for variable indications such...
Overview: Thalidomide was an over-the-counter ‘wonder drug’, marketed to pregnant women in the 1950s...
Thalidomide has several mechanisms of action: a hypnosedative effect, several immuno-modulatory prop...
No drug has had a greater effect than thalidomide on the extent and intensity of the preclinical inv...
Thalidomide is in many ways the archetypal drug of our era. Produced in the mid 1950s by the German ...
Thalidomide has several mechanisms of action: several immuno-modulatory properties, an anti-angiogen...
Thanks go to Dr. Chris Mahony, Prof. Martin Collinson, Shaunna-Leigh Beedie and Alexandra Diamond fo...
Thalidomide (-phthalimido-glutarimide), a hypnotic sedative and anxiolytic with anti-emetic properti...
Thalidomide, first synthesized in 1953, was widely prescribed for morning sickness of pregnant women...
The Titanic has become a metaphor for the disastrous consequences of an unqualified belief in the sa...
This paper attempts to give a brief history of the drug Thalidomide, from its initial market success...
Thalidomide was first introduced in 1953 as an oral sedative-hypnotic [1], and was used to ameliorat...
Background: In the late 1950s and early 1960s the drug Thalidomide was given to thousands of pregnan...
Thalidomide has several targets and mechanisms of action: a hypnosedative effect, several immunomodu...
Acknowledgements Thanks to members of the Thalidomide Society for helpful discussions on thalidomide...
Thalidomide (TD) is the drug in clinical use since over half a century for variable indications such...
Overview: Thalidomide was an over-the-counter ‘wonder drug’, marketed to pregnant women in the 1950s...
Thalidomide has several mechanisms of action: a hypnosedative effect, several immuno-modulatory prop...
No drug has had a greater effect than thalidomide on the extent and intensity of the preclinical inv...
Thalidomide is in many ways the archetypal drug of our era. Produced in the mid 1950s by the German ...
Thalidomide has several mechanisms of action: several immuno-modulatory properties, an anti-angiogen...
Thanks go to Dr. Chris Mahony, Prof. Martin Collinson, Shaunna-Leigh Beedie and Alexandra Diamond fo...