Chapter 2, Parenteral Drug Administration: Routes of Administration and Devices. Boca Raton, FL, USA: CRC Press, 2010.Bhattacharjee H, Thoma A (2010) Parenteral drug administration: routes of administration and devices. In: Nema S, Ludwig JD (eds) Pharmaceutical dosage forms parenteral medications...
Use of Parenteral Therapy Parenteral Route Advantages and Disadvantages of Parenteral Medications Lesson Summary Frequently Asked Questions Which routes are examples of parenteral administration? There are four basic example of routes of parenteral administration such as intradermal, subcutaneous, intramuscular...
Parenteral drug administration means any non-oral means of administration, but is generally interpreted as relating to injecting directly into the body, bypassing the skin and mucous membranes. The common parenteral routes are intramuscular (IM), subcutaneous (SC) and intravenous (IV). Box 1 outline...
Other common routes of parenteral administration, such as intramuscular and subcutaneous, however, represent lower clinical complications unless there is microbial contamination to the particles or high-hazard chemical constituents leaching out. In the case of particle introduction through these routes, the...
Parenteral Products: The Preparation and Quality Control of Products for Injection deals with modern pharmaceutical practice in the preparation, quality control, and storage of injectable drug solutions. The book gives a basic background of parenteral solutions, the routes of administration, the effects...
Parenteral excipients are inactive ingredients used in the formulation of injectable drug products (i.e., formulations delivered through intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous, or other non-oral routes). These excipients play a crucial role in maintaining the stability, solubility, and safety of the ...
Parenteral Drug Products Injections and implanted drug products - Injected through the skin or other external boundary tissue, - Implanted within the body to allow the direct administration of the active drug substances into blood vessels, organs, tissues, or lesions. Routes of administration intravenou...
The article contains sections titled: 1.Dosage Forms as Drug Delivery Systems2.Routes of Administration2.1.Parenteral Administration2.2.Oral Administration... RI Mahato,AS Narang - CRC Press/Taylor & Francis 被引量: 57发表: 2014年 Parenteral drug delivery: 2 The earliest documented record of paren...
Ketamine as an Analgesic: Parenteral, Oral, Rectal, Subcutaneous, Transdermal and Intranasal Administration.Examines the use of ketamine as an anesthetic. Routes administering the drug; Insight on the analgesic effect of the drug; Conclusion.
As used herein, the term “parenteral” is given its ordinary and customary meaning in the field of pharmaceutical drug routes of administration. According to the Food and Drug Administration's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Data Standards Manual (CDER Data Element Number C-DRG-00301; Da...