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Meeting Abstracts|
September 2000
Room H, 10/16/2000 9: 00 AM - 11: 00 AM (PS) Evidence That the Fentanyl Blood-Brain-Barrier Transporter Is pKa-Specific : A-525
Anesthesiology and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO, United States.
Anesthesiology September 2000, Vol. 93, A–525.
Citation
Thomas K. Henthorn, Xiangdong Yan, Lawrence Ng; Room H, 10/16/2000 9: 00 AM - 11: 00 AM (PS) Evidence That the Fentanyl Blood-Brain-Barrier Transporter Is pKa-Specific : A-525. Anesthesiology 2000; 93:A–525 doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-200009001-00525
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