Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Thorotrast> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 75 of
75
with 100 triples per page.
- Thorotrast abstract "Thorotrast is a suspension containing particles of the radioactive compound thorium dioxide, ThO2, that was used as a radiocontrast agent in medical radiography in the 1930s and 1940s. (Use in some countries, such as the U.S., continued into the 1950s.)Thorium compounds produce excellent images because of thorium's high opacity to X-rays (it has a high cross section for absorption). Unfortunately, thorium is retained in the body, and it is radioactive, emitting harmful alpha radiation as it decays. Because the suspension offered high image quality and had virtually no immediate side-effects compared to the alternatives available at the time, Thorotrast became widely used after its introduction in 1931. (António Egas Moniz contributed to its development.). About 2 to 10 million patients worldwide have been treated with Thorotrast. However, today it has shown an increase risk in certain cancers such as cholangiocarcinomas and angiosarcomas of the liver.".
- Thorotrast thumbnail Fluorite-unit-cell-3D-ionic.png?width=300.
- Thorotrast wikiPageID "716048".
- Thorotrast wikiPageLength "5328".
- Thorotrast wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Thorotrast wikiPageRevisionID "668811220".
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Alpha_decay.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Alpha_radiation.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Angiosarcoma.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink António_Egas_Moniz.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Biological_half-life.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Bone.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Category:Health_disasters.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Category:IARC_Group_1_carcinogens.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Category:Radiocontrast_agents.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Category:Thorium.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Category:Withdrawn_drugs.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Cholangiocarcinoma.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Cross_section_(physics).
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Danish_language.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Denmark.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Facing_the_Truth_(2002_film).
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Facing_the_Truth_(film).
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Hepatocellular_carcinoma.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Historadiography.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Iodine.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Leukemia.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Liver.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Lymph_node.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Medical_radiography.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Nils_Malmros.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Propyliodone.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Radioactive_decay.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Radiocontrast_agent.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Malmros.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Second_World_War.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Spleen.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Suspension_(chemistry).
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Thorium.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink Thorium_dioxide.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink File:Fluorite-unit-cell-3D-ionic.png.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLink File:Thorotrast.jpg.
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLinkText "Thorotrast".
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLinkText "a colloidal dispersion of thorium-232 dioxide".
- Thorotrast wikiPageWikiLinkText "thorotrast".
- Thorotrast hasPhotoCollection Thorotrast.
- Thorotrast wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Contrast_media.
- Thorotrast wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Thorotrast subject Category:Health_disasters.
- Thorotrast subject Category:IARC_Group_1_carcinogens.
- Thorotrast subject Category:Radiocontrast_agents.
- Thorotrast subject Category:Thorium.
- Thorotrast subject Category:Withdrawn_drugs.
- Thorotrast hypernym Suspension.
- Thorotrast type Article.
- Thorotrast type Drug.
- Thorotrast type Actinide.
- Thorotrast type Article.
- Thorotrast type Drug.
- Thorotrast type Element.
- Thorotrast comment "Thorotrast is a suspension containing particles of the radioactive compound thorium dioxide, ThO2, that was used as a radiocontrast agent in medical radiography in the 1930s and 1940s. (Use in some countries, such as the U.S., continued into the 1950s.)Thorium compounds produce excellent images because of thorium's high opacity to X-rays (it has a high cross section for absorption).".
- Thorotrast label "Thorotrast".
- Thorotrast sameAs Thorotrast.
- Thorotrast sameAs Thorotrast.
- Thorotrast sameAs Thorotrast.
- Thorotrast sameAs Torotrasto.
- Thorotrast sameAs Thorotrast.
- Thorotrast sameAs m.0358v1.
- Thorotrast sameAs Q423827.
- Thorotrast sameAs Q423827.
- Thorotrast wasDerivedFrom Thorotrast?oldid=668811220.
- Thorotrast depiction Fluorite-unit-cell-3D-ionic.png.
- Thorotrast isPrimaryTopicOf Thorotrast.