Matching articles for "chelating agents"
Nonstandard Uses of Chelation Therapy
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • September 20, 2010; (Issue 1347)
Chelation therapy involves oral administration, intravenous
infusion or intramuscular injection of drugs that
increase excretion of heavy metals. The Medical Letter’s
last article on this subject found no...
Chelation therapy involves oral administration, intravenous
infusion or intramuscular injection of drugs that
increase excretion of heavy metals. The Medical Letter’s
last article on this subject found no evidence that it was
effective for treatment of cardiovascular disease. Since
then, off-label use of chelation therapy has expanded to
include treating children with autism and adults with
Alzheimer’s disease, cancer and other chronic
diseases.
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Deferasirox (Exjade): A New Iron Chelator
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • April 24, 2006; (Issue 1233)
Deferasirox (Exjade - Novartis), an oral chelating agent, recently received accelerated approval from the FDA as an orphan drug for oral treatment of chronic iron overload due to blood transfusions...
Deferasirox (Exjade - Novartis), an oral chelating agent, recently received accelerated approval from the FDA as an orphan drug for oral treatment of chronic iron overload due to blood transfusions (transfusional hemosiderosis) in patients >2 years old. Deferasirox is a tridentate (2 molecules of deferasirox bind to one atom of iron) chelating agent with high affinity for iron. It has much lower affinity for zinc and copper.