PMID: 2117178Jan 1, 1990Paper

Aerosol deposition in the alveolar space

Lung
G Huchon

Abstract

The fate of inhaled drugs depends on the specifications of the aerosol, the drug itself, the conditions of aerosolization, and the presence of lung disease. There are still many points to be elucidated before aerosols can be used more reliably in the treatment of respiratory or nonrespiratory conditions.

References

Jun 1, 1978·Chest·M T Newhouse, R E Ruffin
Feb 1, 1988·The American Review of Respiratory Disease·A B MontgomeryP C Hopewell
Dec 1, 1987·The American Review of Respiratory Disease·J S IlowiteG C Smaldone
Apr 1, 1973·The American Review of Respiratory Disease·G J Jakab, G M Green
Jan 1, 1973·Archives of Internal Medicine·T T Mercer
Jan 1, 1973·Archives of Internal Medicine·I S Goldberg, R V Lourenço
Jan 1, 1982·American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal·C P Yu, C K Diu
Jun 1, 1980·American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal·W StahlhofenJ Heyder
Oct 1, 1961·Archives of Environmental Health·L DAUTREBANDE, W WALKENHORST

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Nov 13, 2008·American Journal of Physical Anthropology·James K Rilling

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Asthma

This feed focuses in Asthma in which your airways narrow and swell. This can make breathing difficult and trigger coughing, wheezing and shortness of breath.

Allergy and Asthma

Allergy and asthma are inflammatory disorders that are triggered by the activation of an allergen-specific regulatory t cell. These t cells become activated when allergens are recognized by allergen-presenting cells. Here is the latest research on allergy and asthma.