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Canada-0-HYPNOTHERAPY 公司名錄
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公司新聞:
- Health Canada warns consumers not to inhale nitrous oxide, also known . . .
Health Canada is warning consumers about the serious health risks, including death, of inhaling nitrous oxide products, also known as laughing gas and by various street names, such as "whippets," "hippy crack," "NOS" and "nang," for recreational purposes
- Health Canada: Inhaling laughing gas poses health risks - CTV News
Health Canada is warning people not to inhale nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, recreationally due to “serious health risks, including death ”
- Toxic substances list: nitrous oxide - Canada. ca
Used as an anesthetic in dentistry and surgery and as a propellant in aerosol cans, nitrous oxide is most commonly produced via the heating of ammonium nitrate (NH 4 NO 3) It is also released naturally from oceans, by bacteria in soils, and from animal wastes
- Public Advisory - Health Canada warns consumers not to inhale nitrous . . .
Health Canada is warning consumers about the serious health risks, including death, of inhaling nitrous oxide products, also known as laughing gas and by various street names, such as
- Health Canada warns consumers not to inhale ‘laughing gas . . .
Health Canada notes it is strictly prohibited to advertise and sell nitrous oxide products for inhalation to the public, and highlights that they are still being sold online and in retail stores
- Health Canada warns against recreational use of nitrous oxide
Health Canada has issued a public advisory on the dangers of nitrous oxide inhalation, sharing it is working to seize illegally advertised, recreational products
- Health Canada Warns About The Dangers Of Inhaling Nitrous Oxide
Health Canada has issued a warning about nitrous oxide products, also known as laughing gas, after reports of severe health risks—including death—linked to recreational inhalation This alert affects anyone who may encounter these products outside of medical settings
- Details for: NITROUS OXIDE USP - Drug and Health Products Portal
Section C 01 020 1 of the Food and Drug Regulations and section 62 of the Medical Devices Regulations, require hospitals to report to Health Canada all serious adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and medical device incidents (MDIs) within 30 days of being documented within the hospital
- Waste Anesthetic Gases, Hazards of - Canadian Centre for Occupational . . .
As most halogenated anesthetic gases cannot be detected by smell (unless they are in high concentration), proper monitoring becomes all the more critical Nitrous oxide is an odourless and colourless gas and can only be detected by WAG monitor
- Diagnosis and management of toxicity associated with the recreational . . .
Recreational use of nitrous oxide is a growing problem in many jurisdictions, including Canada Although isolated, short-term use rarely leads to serious complications, chronic use can cause neurotoxicity that is often not fully reversible; cervical myelopathy, peripheral neuropathy and encephalopathy have been described
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