| DipChem | Diploma in Chemistry |
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| DPhC | Doctor of Pharmaceutical Chemistry |
| IFCC | International Federation of Clinical Chemistry |
| IUPAC | International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry |
| NRCC | National Registry in Clinical Chemistry; National Research Council of Canada |
| chemistry, inorganic | A field of chemistry which pertains to chemical compounds or ions that do not contain the element carbon (with the exception of carbon dioxide and compounds containing a carbonate radical, e.g., calcium carbonate). (12 Dec 1998) |
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| chemistry, pharmaceutical | Chemistry that deals with the composition and preparation of substances used in treatment of patients or diagnostic studies. (12 Dec 1998) |
| pharmaceutical chemistry | Medicinal chemistry in its application to the analysis, development, preparation, and the manufacture of drugs. Synonym: medicinal chemistry, pharmacochemistry. (05 Mar 2000) |
| clinical chemistry | The chemistry of human health and disease, chemistry in connection with the management of patients, as in a hospital laboratory. (05 Mar 2000) |
| clinical chemistry tests | Laboratory tests demonstrating the presence of physiologically significant substances in the blood, urine, tissue, and body fluids with application to the diagnosis or therapy of disease. (12 Dec 1998) |
| physiological chemistry | The scientific study of the chemistry of living cells, tissues, organs and organisms. (09 Oct 1997) |
| computational chemistry | <chemistry> The use of computers to aid in the analysis of chemicals. (05 Jan 1998) |
| nuclear chemistry | The science concerned with the chemistry of nuclear reactions and processes. (05 Mar 2000) |
| synthetic chemistry | The formation or building up of complex compounds by uniting the more simple ones. (05 Mar 2000) |
| inorganic chemistry | The science concerned with compounds not involving carbon-containing molecules. (05 Mar 2000) |
| organic chemistry | <chemistry> A branch of chemistry that deals specifically with the structures, synthesis and reactions of carbon-containing compounds. (11 Jan 1998) |
| ecological chemistry | Chemistry that concentrates on the effects of woman-made chemicals on the environment as well as the development of agents that are not harmful to the environment. The study of the molecular interactions between species and between species and the environment. (05 Mar 2000) |
| epithermal chemistry | So-called "hot atom" chemistry; the science concerned with the chemical reactions of recoil atoms and free radicals produced in low energy nuclear processes. (05 Mar 2000) |
| combinatorial chemistry |
Dr WA Warr Wendy Warr & Associates Cheshire, UK
Ãâó: www.wiley.com/legacy/wileychi/ecc/topic3.html
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| combinatorial chemistry |
The use of chemical methods to generate all possible combinations of chemicals starting with a subset of compounds. The building blocks may be peptides, nucleic acids or small molecules. The libraries of compounds formed by this methodology are used to probe for new pharmaceutical reagents (see high-throughput screening).
Ãâó: falcon.roswellpark.org/labweb/glossary.html
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| combinatorial chemistry |
The use of a small set of chemical building blocks, combined together in multiple ways, using standard chemistries, to create large libraries of medicinally relevant compounds that may be screened for potential new drugs. Combinatorial chemistry is used in tandem with high-throughput screening to identify compounds that bind to a therapeutic target protein and are thus potential new drugs.
Ãâó: www.syrrx.com/technology/glossary.htm
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| combinatorial chemistry |
Preparation of collections of compounds by joining molecular building blocks in different combinations. Also known as combichem.
Ãâó: textonly.kombyonyx.com/glossary.htm
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| combinatorial chemistry |
Is used to synthesize large number of chemical compounds by combining sets of building blocks. Each newly synthesized compound's composition is slightly different from the previous one. A traditional chemist can synthesize 100-200 compounds per year. A combinatorial robotic system can produce in a year thousands or millions compounds which can be tested for potential drug candidates in a high-throughput screening process.
Ãâó: www.bioscreening.com/reference/glossary.htm
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