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UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 18
author: John Wilson

Case Study 43


UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 75
author: John Wilson

Case Study 42


UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 122
author: John Wilson

Case Study 41


UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 163
author: John Wilson

Case Study 40


UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 187
author: John Wilson

Case Study 39


UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 180
author: John Wilson

Case Study 38


UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 264
author: John Wilson

Case Study 37


UKNEQAS Toxicology Case Scheme
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 284
author: John Wilson

Case Study 36


A new method to monitor drugs at dance venues
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 462
author: John D Ramsey, Marcus A Butcher, Martin F Murphy,

BMJ 2001; 323: 603.

Information on the use of illicit drugs depends heavily on users' recall - what they remember, or think, that they have purchased and on seizures by law enforcement agencies. Neither method may be able to give accurate information on what is currently available. We have developed a new method designed to gain information on current drug consumption in a London dance venue.


UKNEQAS Drugs of Abuse Commentary No. 1, The Effects and Detection of Specimen Dilution
view pdf filepdf file viewed: 295
author: Brian Smith & Steve George

Despite urine having a variable water content, the ingestion of large amounts of fluids will produce a dilute specimen. This is sometimes a deliberate mechanism of avoiding detection of drug misuse since the resultant concentration of any drugs that may be excreted in the urine could be below the sensitivity of the assays used for their detection.


records: 1 - 10 |  11