Drugs
in sentence
2204 examples of Drugs in a sentence
Now, this is a really important discovery, I think, not just because it tells us something cool about nature, but also because it may tell us something more about how we should find
drugs.
Now, we know that even today, most of our
drugs
derive from natural products, including plants, and in indigenous cultures, traditional healers often look at animals to find new
drugs.
The discovery that these animals can also use medication opens up completely new avenues, and I think that maybe one day, we will be treating human diseases with
drugs
that were first discovered by butterflies, and I think that is an amazing opportunity worth pursuing.
Vaccines, like other drugs, can have potential adverse effects.
But that made no sense to him whatsoever, so now he thought I was on
drugs.
They also determine whether or not other
drugs
will work for your heart condition.
So these different microbes have all these different kinds of functions that I told you about, everything from digesting food to involvement in different kinds of diseases, metabolizing drugs, and so forth.
When women are prescribed
drugs
like anti-depressants or hormones, medical protocol requires that they have physician follow-up every three months.
Over-the-counter
drugs
like Midol even claim to treat PMS symptoms like tension and irritability, even though they only contain a diuretic, a pain reliever and caffeine.
Always working, no matter what
drugs
or fights he'd had the night before.
We have advances in biology that should dramatically change the turnaround time to look at a pathogen and be able to make
drugs
and vaccines that fit for that pathogen.
He asked the child if he was carrying any
drugs
or if he had a warrant.
But can you imagine how many might have if the police had stopped those kids and searched their pockets for
drugs
as they walked to class?
When you think about decades of failed housing policies and poor educational structures, when you think about persistent unemployment and underemployment in a community, when you think about poor healthcare, and then you throw
drugs
into the mix and duffel bags full of guns, little wonder that you would see this culture of violence emerge.
We see how a handful of patients responds to treatment in a clinical trial, and we bring
drugs
to a national market.
It was labeled "low-performing and persistently dangerous" due to its low test scores and high number of weapons, drugs, assaults and arrests.
It seemed like a miracle, and ever since, we have been living inside the golden epoch of the miracle
drugs.
Daptomycin, one of the most recent drugs, in 2003, and resistance to it just a year later in 2004.
Bacteria develop resistance so quickly that pharmaceutical companies have decided making antibiotics is not in their best interest, so there are infections moving across the world for which, out of the more than 100 antibiotics available on the market, two
drugs
might work with side effects, or one drug, or none.
In 2000, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the CDC, identified a single case in a hospital in North Carolina of an infection resistant to all but two
drugs.
It would be natural to hope that these infections are extraordinary cases, but in fact, in the United States and Europe, 50,000 people a year die of infections which no
drugs
can help.
We need those new
drugs
badly, and we need incentives: discovery grants, extended patents, prizes, to lure other companies into making antibiotics again.
I'd been thinking about it a lot lately, partly because it's now exactly 100 years since
drugs
were first banned in the United States and Britain, and we then imposed that on the rest of the world.
It's got nothing to do except use these
drugs.
Forget the
drugs.
The most obvious implications are for the War on
Drugs.
Proteins are being used today for an increasingly broad range of different applications, from materials that protect soldiers from injury to devices that detect dangerous compounds, but at least to me, the most exciting application is protein
drugs.
Despite being relatively new, protein
drugs
have already revolutionized medicine, and, for example, insulin is a protein.
Compare that with the small molecules that synthetic chemists make as
drugs.
And in fact, it's their differences that make them great
drugs
to treat different diseases.
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