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PHARMACOLOGY

Exhibiting 891 entries found in the GMN corpus.

YearTitle & TagsAuthor(s)
1878 CEThe action of medicines.
1938 CEThe action of substances allied to 4:4'-diaminodiphenylsulphone in streptococcal and other infections in mice.
2012 CEThe alphabet of Galen. Pharmacy from Antiquity to the Middle Ages. A critical edition of the Latin text with English translation and commentary by Nicholas Everett
1806 CEThe American dispensatory, containing the operations of pharmacy; Together with the natural, chemical, pharmaceutical and medical history of the different substances employed in medicine; illustrated and explained, according to the principles of modern chemistry: Comprehending the improvements in Dr. Duncan's second edition of the Edinburgh new dispensatory. The arrangement simplified, and the whole adapted to the practice of medicine and pharmacy in the United States. With several copperplates, exhibiting the new system of chemical characters, and representing the most useful apparatus.
1801 CEThe American herbal, or materia medica.
2016 CEThe Andean wonder drug: Cinchona bark and imperial science in the Spanish Atlantic, 1630-1800.
1983 CEThe Arabic materia medica of Dioscorides.
1924 CEThe Assyrian herbal: A monograph on the Assyrian vegetable drugs, the subject matter of which was communicated in a paper to the Royal Society, March 20, 1924.
1940 CEThe Badianus manuscript. (Codex Barberini, Latin, 241) Vatican Library. An Aztec herbal of 1552. Edited and translated by Emily W. Emmart.
1970 CEThe birth of penicillin.
1830 CEThe Botanic physician: Being a compendium of the practice of physic, upon botanical principles, containing all the principal branches necessary to the study of medicine, as anatomy; physiology; surgery; causes, symptoms and cure of diseases; midwifery; materia medica; pharmacy, botany, &c. Together with a great variety of useful recipes.
1900 CEThe botanical origin of coca leaves.
2016 CEThe British Pharmacopoeia, 1864 to 2014: Medicines, international standards and the state.
1894 CE​–1895 CEThe chemistry of ipecacuanha.
1949 CEThe chemistry of penicillin.
1996 CEThe cigarette papers. Edited by Stanton A. Glantz, John Slade, Lisa A. Bero, Peter Hanauer, and Deborah E. Barnes.
2018 CEThe circulation of penicillin in Spain: Health, wealth and authority.
1992 CEThe Cleveland herbal, botanical, and horticultural collections: A descriptive bibliography of pre-1830 works from the libraries of the Holden Arboretum, the Cleveland Medical Library Association, and the Garden Center of Cleveland.
1952 CEThe clinical application of antibiotics. Penicillin.
1904 CEThe constituents of chaulmoogra seeds.
1992 CEThe development of American pharmacology. John J. Abel and the shaping of a discipline.
1951 CEThe development of pharmacopoeias.
1959 CEThe discovery of Dicumarol and its sequels.
1699 CEThe dispensary: A poem. In six cantos.
2007 CEThe dispensatory of Ibn at-Tilmīd: Arabic text, English translation, study and glossaries by Oliver Kahl.
1833 CEThe dispensatory of the United States of America.
1998 CEThe divine farmer's materia medica: A translation of the Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing by Yang Shou-zhong.
1928 CEThe divine origin of the craft of the herbalist.
2013 CEThe drug book: From Arsenic to Xanax, 250 milestones in the history of drugs.
1953 CEThe effects of progesterone and related compounds on ovulation and early development in the rabbit.
1839 CE​–1840 CEThe elements of materia medica, comprehending the natural history, preparation, properties, composition, effects and uses of medicines. 2 vols.
1998 CEThe encyclopedia of psychoactive plants: Ethnopharmacology and its applications.
1708 CEThe English physician.
1652 CEThe English physitian: Or, an astrologo-physical discourse of the vulgar herbs of this nation. Being a compleat method of physick, whereby a man may preserve his body in health; or cure himself, being sick, for three pence charge, with such things only as grow in England, as they being most fit for English bodies. Herein is also shewed, 1. The way of making plaisters, oyntments, oyls, pultisses, syrups, julips, or waters, of all sorts of physical herbs, that you may have them readie for your use at all times of the yeer. 2. What planet governeth every herb or tree (used in physick) that groweth in England. 3. The time of gathering all herbs, both vulgarly, and astrologically. 4. The way of drying and keeping the herbs all the yeer. 5. The way of keeping their juyces ready for use at all times. 6. The way of making and keeping all kind of useful compounds made of herbs. 7. The way of mixing medicines, according to cause and mixture of the disease, and part of the body afflicted.
1948 CEThe estimation of acetanilide and its metabolic products, aniline, N-acetyl p-aminophenol and p-aminophenol (free and total conjugated) in biological fluids and tissues.
1911 CEThe ethno-botany of the Gosiute Indians of Utah.
1972 CEThe ethnobotany of the California Indians: A compendium of the plants, their users, and their uses.
1883 CEThe extra pharmacopoeia of unofficial drugs … With references to their use abstracted from the medical journals by W. Wynn Westcott.
1676 CEThe family physician, and the house apothecary: Containing I. Medicines against all such diseases people usually advise with apothecaries to be cured of, II. Instructions, whereby to prepare at your own houses all kinds of necessary medicines that are prepared by apothecaries, or prescribed by physicians, III. The exact prices of all drugs, herbs, seeds, simple and compound medicines, as they are sold at the druggists, or may be sold by the apothecaries, IV. That it's plainly made to appear, that in preparing medicines thus at your own houses, that it's not onely a far safer way, but you shall also save nineteen shillings in twenty, comparing it with the extravagant rates of many apothecaries.
1721 CEThe farriers dispensatory, in three parts. Containing I. A description of the medicinal simples, commonly made use of in the diseases of horses, with their virtues and manner of operation, distributed into proper classes, &c. II. The preparations of simples, vegetable, animal and mineral ; with an explanation of the most usual terms, both in the chymical and galenical pharmacy. III. A number of useful compositions and receipts suited to the cure of all diseases, never before published; as also those of greatest account from Solleysell, Ruini, Blundevill, and other most celebrated authors, digested under their proper heads of powders, balls, drinks, ointments, charges, &c. The proper Method of compounding and making them, with many other useful observations and improvements tending to their right administration. To which is also added, a compleat index of all the medicines contained in the book, whether simple or compound, with a table of diseases pointing to the remedies proper in each malady.
1933 CEThe fibrinolytic activity of hemolytic streptococci.
2007 CEThe first miracle drugs: How the sulfa drugs transformed medicine.
1852 CE​–1853 CEThe flora homoeopathica: Or, illustrations and descriptions of the medicinal plants used as homoeopathic remedies. 2 vols.
1597 CEThe garden of health conteyning the sundry rare and hidden vertues and properties of all kindes of simples and plants, together with the maner how they are to be vsed and applyed in medicine for the health of mans body, against diuers diseases and infirmities most common amongst men. Gathered by the long experience and industrie of William Langham, practitioner in phisicke.
1934 CEThe Greek herbal of Dioscorides, illustrated by a Byzantine, A.D. 512; Englished by John Goodyer, A.D. 1655; edited and first printed, A.D. 1933, by Robert T. Gunther ... with three hundred and ninety-six illustrations.
1526 CEThe grete herball whiche geveth parfyt knowlege and understandyng of all maner of herbes and there gracyous vertues.
1990 CEThe healing forest: Medicinal and toxic plants of the Northwest Amazonia.
1927 CEThe herbal in antiquity and its transmission to later ages.
2014 CEThe herbal of al-Ghāfiqī. A facsimile edition of MS 7508 in the Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University, with critical essays. Edited by F. Jamil Ragep and Faith Wallis with Pamela Miller and Adam Gacek.
1945 CEThe herbal of Rufinus. Edited from the unique manuscript by Lynn Thorndike, assisted by Francis S. Benjamin, Jr.