Forty-nine healthy volunteers were treated daily with Artroglobina suppositories (anticartilage antiparathyroid immunoglobulins) for twelve days, in order to prove the absence of side effects. Volunteers were examined daily. Blood and urine samples were taken before the treatment, twelve days, twenty-four days and six months after the beginning of the treatment. Slight changes were noted in some parameters though remaining in the normal range and disappearing six months later. No symptoms of intolerance, toxicity or side effects were registered.
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The absorption of and specific antibody formation to Artroglobina (:AG, beta and gamma-globulin fractions of anticartilage-antiparathyroid immune serum from the horse) administered into the rectum were studied in rats and guinea-pigs, an immunological tests in the "Phase I Study" were carried out using serum from volunteers. 1) When the radio-labelled AG (125I-AG) was administered into the rat rectum, the plasma level of 125I reached the maximum (3.1% of the total dosage) at 2 hour later and 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Clin Pharmacol Biopharm
December 1979
Forty-nine healthy volunteers were treated daily with Artroglobina suppositories (anticartilage antiparathyroid immunoglobulins) for twelve days, in order to prove the absence of side effects. Volunteers were examined daily. Blood and urine samples were taken before the treatment, twelve days, twenty-four days and six months after the beginning of the treatment.
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