Get Free Shipping on orders over $49
Developments in Nephrology : Basic, Pharmacological, and Clinical Aspects: Proceedings of the International Meeting on Diuretics, Sorrento, Italy, May 26 30, 1986 - Antonia Dal Canton

Developments in Nephrology

Basic, Pharmacological, and Clinical Aspects: Proceedings of the International Meeting on Diuretics, Sorrento, Italy, May 26 30, 1986

By: Antonia Dal Canton (Editor), Vittorio E. Andreucci (Editor), V. E. Andreucci (Editor)

Hardcover | 31 May 1987

At a Glance

Hardcover


$329.00

or 4 interest-free payments of $82.25 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

The need for adequate means by which to improve urine output is very old. Even in the "Scuola Salernitana", the oldest medieval medical school in Western Europe, about 1000 years ago it was taught how to improve urine output. The list of known "diuretica" included herbs, plants, roots, vegetables, in particular asparagus, fennel and carrot. The first diuretic drugs, however, were mercurial compounds. Thus, calomel, mercurous chloride, was initially used as a diuretic in the sixteenth century by Paracelsus, being one of the ingredients of the so-called "Guy's Hospital pill". But calomel had a cathartic effect so that it was replaced by organic mercurial compounds. These diuretics were clearly toxic. After the discovery of the car­ bonic anhydrase, in the early 1930s, and the introduction of sulfanilamide as a chemotherapeutic agent, it was observed that this drug was inhibiting carbonic anhydrase in vitro and urinary acidification in vivo thereby causing metabolic acidosis; urine output, however, appeared to increase. Subsequent studies led to the synthesis of more potent analogs, in particular acetazolamide. Studies on car­ bonic anhydrase inhibitors led to the synthesis of benzothiadiazides which disclosed much less inactivating action on carbonic anhydrase and much more diuretic effect through an inhibition of tubular transport of sodium and chloride. Chlorothiazide was the first member of this class of diuretics. Thiazides are still used in clinical practice.

More in Pharmacology

Rang & Dale's Pharmacology : 10th Edition - James M. Ritter

RRP $131.95

$102.75

22%
OFF
A Taste for Poisons : Global Science Education - James Bridges

RRP $118.00

$102.75

13%
OFF
Toxicology Handbook : 4th edition - Jason Armstrong

RRP $130.95

$99.75

24%
OFF
Kinase Targets and Drug Discovery

RRP $392.95

$347.75

12%
OFF
Pharmacodynamics of Herbal Medicines - Cameron James
Paramedic & Emergency Pharmacology Guidelines : 2nd Edition - Sonja Maria

RRP $39.85

$34.75

13%
OFF
Botanical Medicine for Women's Health 2e - Aviva Romm

RRP $131.95

$102.75

22%
OFF
Pharmacology for Anaesthesia and Intensive Care : 5th Edition - Tom Peck
V is for Venom : Agatha Christie's Chemicals of Death - Kathryn Harkup
Pharmacology : 8th Edition - Karen Whalen

RRP $163.47

$127.50

22%
OFF
An Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry : 7th Edition - Graham L.  Patrick
Essential Herbs and Natural Supplements - Lesley Braun

RRP $100.95

$80.75

20%
OFF
Psychiatric Drugs Explained : 7th Edition - David Healy

RRP $64.95

$53.75

17%
OFF
The Twenty-something Treatment - Meg Jay

RRP $24.99

$21.75

13%
OFF