Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

The Drug-Equivalent Use of Vitamins

Vitamin Indication for treatment Active form Pharmaceutical forms Pharmacologic daily doses Recommended daily dietary allowances (National Academy OF Sciences 1980)  [Pg.659]

A Supplement vitamin A deficiency states (malnutrition), impairment of absorption or transport Therapy nyctalopia, difficulties of adaptation to darkness, xerophthalmia, severe skin or mucosa damages, follicular hyperkeratosis, acne, inner ear deafness, tinnitus Retinyl palmitate, retinyl acetate Tablets, capsules, drops, emulsion, suspension, ointment, ampules 7,500-100,000 lU 420-700 pg 800-1,000 pg [Pg.659]

Therapy paralgesia, cramps in the lower extremities, keratitis, glossitis, cheilitis, seborrhea, hemeralopia, conjunctivitis [Pg.660]

Supplement vitamin Be deficiency states, impaired absorption, therapy with vitamin Be antagonists, increased requirements (pregnancy, lactation), increased stimulation with exogenic estrogens. X-ray therapy [Pg.660]

Therapy vitamin Be-dependent hypochrome anemia and convulsions in infants, seborrheic dermatitis, glossitis, neuritis peripherica, decreased formation of antibodies, cerebral convulsions with EEG changes [Pg.660]


Deficiency of vitamin A leads to degenerative lesions in the epithelium, xerophthalmia being the classical vitamin A deficiency disease. The drug-equivalent uses of vitamin A can be seen in Table 1. [Pg.667]


See other pages where The Drug-Equivalent Use of Vitamins is mentioned: [Pg.658]    [Pg.658]   


SEARCH



Use of drugs

Vitamin using

© 2024 chempedia.info