Handbook of Non-Prescription Drugs - ACS Publications

other insects have ever been released in such num- bers, the success of the sterility control method demonstrated the need for research on large-scale...
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Handbook of Non-Prescription Drugs. Edited by GEORGE J3, GRIFFICNH.~IGI.:V'. Americxti Pharmaceiitic:al .issc~ciatiiiti, \\T:~shiiigtnti,I ) . C. l M 7 . 10'3 p ~ i . 3 . 5 X 22 m i . Paperi):wk, $4.1)0. T h i a haiidk)ook is to give pharma ail iii~ightitito the c'onipositicitt of over-the-c,ciiititer driig prodiict?, m i t ' e than 1000 tieing li.:ted. There are 22 categories acrordiiig to use, atid 2 pages of proditit intiex. For many, h!it t i o t all, inat,erials., grtieric : i t i d trade 1i:inieh and maiitifactiirers are listed. The article:it)oitt r;wh category were writteri, for the most part,, by *tatf lwrs of (~ollegesi i f pharmacy aiid iricliitfe hints eoricertiitig inti recornme~~t~ntioiis t o hoth p h n i ~ ~ i a r innd s t patietit.

M a s s Spectrometry of Organic Compounds. I3y HERBERT I',uiizrKixwrcz, Terhtii~cheTToch,*chltle, 13raiinschweig, C m i , I)JI~:R.ASSI, St:mford I-iiiversity, slid I)UI)LEY T I . \ V I L L I A M ~ , trnhridge 1Ttiivei.sity. Trolderl-l)ay, In(..> $mi Frattc~isccl, rlif. 1967. vii 690 pp. 18.5 X 25.5 c~m. $17.05.

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1 lie import :itice iif mans spec1 ronietry as ari analj~tiraltool f11r the organic caheniis cticitig his craft in these exciting days 1,:itt11(11 be overemph d . The near flittire will certainly : i c w i i t ticite this ciiiidit ' J the extetit that a wrorkiiig knowledge I J ~ ( h e elements of Inass qpectrometry will be considered aii t'sqetit is1 skill possessed hj- all organic chemi.1:: regardless ( i f w h e n their formal training n-as cwnpleted. This book serve.? mi import ant plirpose iit presenting a clear, mely acroiitit of what can be expected from mash of it wide variety of organic cwmpo is for each chapter (there are twent deal with a certain functional group iri respect to modes arid r:ttiotializations of the major fragmentation processes. T h e types

Lipids and Lipidoses. I 3 i t e d by ot,tiei,sof lipid tiietahilism~iii mi rhe ettrretit developmetit !if lipid * arid I)ioc~heriii.-t pertiiieut to utitlerstaiidittg these eo es.*e state>. O n t h t . whole, the t ~ ~ i t h i i rhave s admirably >ticreeded i l l pwseritiiig :i re:rdahle itrid iiiterestirig ac.rotiiit, which covers ihe siibject i t t reasoiiable depth :itid/iir provides amplr refererices t ( I ot~igiti:il soiirces. P a r t I, :lib-edited hy \V. SI offel i i i i i l designated "Lipids;" ciiiitairis chapters elititled The Chernibtry of 1Iammaliari Lipid(\T. St offel), BiochemiGtry of Triglycerides (R. Shapiro), Riochemistrj, of Steroid.: iI ) . Krit chewky), Biochemistry of I'hribphatides (I?. J. Rossiter), Biochemistry of Sphingosine Chiitaitiiiig Lipids (Ft. 1 f . Riirtori), Lipoprot,ei~is(I). G. Coriiwell), atttl Methods for Separatioii :tnd I)et~ermitiat,ioii of Lipids (1 I . \Vage~ier). This rection, by far of greatest practical interesi t o the medicirial cheniiut, comprises less thitri half the book :2 1 0 pp). The treatmetit r l i ,ubjeot, matter it1 these chapt,ers ranges froiii what amounts t,o ct cataloging of striictures with brief co~niiierit:ir>. iti t.he Chemistry of l\lummalian Lipids chapter (e.(/.,tr,t:~l (if i i t i i :