Emergency management of chemical weapons injuries

scientific article

Emergency management of chemical weapons injuries is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1177/0897190011420677
P698PubMed publication ID22080590
P5875ResearchGate publication ID51796116

P2093author name stringPeter D Anderson
P2860cites workUnexpected “gas” casualties in Moscow: A medical toxicology perspectiveQ34192521
Clinical manifestations of sarin nerve gas exposureQ35193776
Common chemical agent threatsQ36280248
Prehospital management of sarin nerve gas terrorism in urban settings: 10 years of progress after the Tokyo subway sarin attackQ36330345
Report on 640 victims of the Tokyo subway sarin attackQ42058597
Phenytoin in toxin‐induced seizuresQ42925062
Non-lethal weapons and the civilian death toll in war timeQ43275638
Biologists napping while work militarizedQ43289359
Hostage deaths put gas weapons in spotlightQ44209437
The chronic effects of sulfur mustard exposure.Q45987476
Acute effects of sulfur mustard injury--Munich experiences.Q45989656
P433issue1
P304page(s)61-68
P577publication date2011-11-11
P1433published inJournal of Pharmacy PracticeQ6295746
P1476titleEmergency management of chemical weapons injuries
P478volume25

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q28601204Antioxidants as potential medical countermeasures for chemical warfare agents and toxic industrial chemicals
Q40273285Bioterrorism: pathogens as weapons
Q47885914Chemical crowd control agents.
Q90860744Disaster Health Management: Do Pharmacists Fit in the Team?
Q46492305From the Cover: Catalytic Antioxidant Rescue of Inhaled Sulfur Mustard Toxicity.
Q30223264Nuclear and radiological terrorism: continuing education article
Q51729712Th17/Treg-related cytokine imbalance in sulfur mustard exposed and stable chronic obstructive pulmonary (COPD) patients: correlation with disease activity.

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