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ketoprofen SR

✓ Approved

Ethypharm Corp. · PTGS1 · Small Molecule

What is ketoprofen SR?

ketoprofen SR is a small molecule developed by Ethypharm Corp.. It is approved for therapeutic indications via unknown.

Drug Profile

CompanyEthypharm Corp.
Drug ClassSmall Molecule
Molecular TargetPTGS1, PTGS2
RouteUnknown
StatusApproved

Mechanism of Action

Molecular Targets

ketoprofen SR acts on 2 molecular targets:

PTGS1prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 1 (COX3, PCOX1)
PTGS2prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (GRIPGHS, hCox-2)
Want deeper analysis?Noah AI can explain complex mechanisms and compare to similar drugs.

Therapeutic Indications

ketoprofen SR is developed for 2 unique indications across 2 therapeutic areas.

Therapeutic AreaConditionPhase
Gastrointestinal disordersAbdominal pain✓ Approved
Hepatobiliary disordersHepatitis✓ Approved

Related Research Articles

PubMedPhoton science2026-07-08

The Use of Synchrotron Radiation in the Medical Sciences.

Osborn Lydia L, Inman Jamie L JL, Ralston Corie Y CY

Synchrotron radiation (SR) sources provide unparalleled brilliance, collimation, coherence, and tunability, enabling specialized techniques that are crucial for advancing medical research across diverse fields from radiation oncology to rational drug design. Certain SR methods, such as macromolecular crystallography, are highly developed and automated, and have been used for decades for both fundamental understanding of biomolecules as well as pharmaceutical design, while other methods, such as microbeam radiation therapy, represent relatively recent developments. Scattering and diffraction methods using SR can provide atomic-level structural mapping of proteins, nucleic acids, and complexes. Imaging applications using SR continue to be developed and advanced for mapping of biological structures and potential use as diagnostics in disease detection. Spectroscopic methods are used to study elemental distributions relevant for detection of contamination in biological systems. Collectively, SR research delivers detailed multiscale structural and molecular information essential for addressing complex biomedical challenges. In this mini-review, we cover SR methods that are specifically relevant to medical applications, focusing mainly on SR X-ray and SR infrared techniques and applications. We include diffraction and scattering, imaging, absorption and fluorescent spectroscopy, use of SR in oncology treatments, and radiation damage methods that integrate one or another aspect of an SR method in conjunction with other non-SR techniques.

PubMedEnvironmental geochemistry and health2026-07-08

Improving strontium (Sr) phytoremediation efficiency in Sorghum bicolor × sudanense through nitrogen management and a microbial combination.

Huang Chaohui C, Dai Xueqi X, Zheng Huiying H, Chen Xiaoming X et al.

This study optimized a phytoremediation system using Sorghum bicolor × sudanense for strontium (Sr)-contaminated soil. We investigated three key factors: optimal harvest time, a microbial combination (MCH, consisting of Deinococcus radiodurans and Bacillus cereus at a 2:1 ratio), and nitrogen (N) fertilizer forms (ammonium sulfate, sodium nitrate, and urea). Plants were harvested at different days after sowing (40-180 days) to determine the optimal harvest period. Under 200 mg kg-1 Sr stress, harvesting at 135 days achieved the highest annual Sr accumulation (21.66 mg kg-1). MCH inoculation increased exchangeable Sr by 64.91%, improved the rhizosphere microbial community, and enhanced plant tolerance to Sr stress. Among the three N sources, urea (0.2 g kg-1 N) showed the best performance in promoting plant biomass and Sr uptake; its co-application with MCH synergistically increased Sr enrichment by 67.45% and 40.09% compared to the non-amended control (CK1) and microbe-only control (CK2), respectively. Although mowing treatments did not improve annual Sr accumulation, certain strategies (e.g., retaining 70% stubble with three mowings per year) showed potential for future optimization. These results demonstrate that integrating microbial inoculation and N management can significantly enhance plant-based Sr remediation efficiency.

PubMedUltrasound in medicine & biology2026-07-08

Super-Resolution Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound Detects Renal Microvascular Impairment in Early Chronic Kidney Disease with Preserved Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate: A Comparative Study with Conventional Contrast-enhanced Ultrasound and Serum Biomarkers.

Shen Chang C, Xue Liyun L, Li Xueqi X, Zhao Tianyu T et al.

Renal microvascular rarefaction is an early pathological event in chronic kidney disease (CKD) that may precede a measurable decline in renal function. However, currently available non-invasive tools remain limited in detecting these early structural alterations. This study aimed to evaluate the value of super-resolution contrast-enhanced ultrasound (SR-CEUS) for assessing renal cortical microvascular impairment in early CKD with preserved estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), and to compare its performance with conventional contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) and serum biomarkers. In this prospective study, 39 patients with early CKD scheduled for renal biopsy and 41 healthy controls were enrolled. All participants underwent CEUS and SR-CEUS imaging during the same contrast-enhanced examination. Quantitative SR-CEUS parameters, including vessel density (VD), mean velocity (MV) and perfusion index (PI), as well as conventional CEUS time-intensity curve parameters, were analyzed. Logistic regression models were constructed based on variables with significant between-group differences, and diagnostic performance was assessed using receiver operating characteristic analysis. DeLong tests were used to compare model performance. Correlations between imaging-derived parameters and renal functional biomarkers across all participants, as well as histopathological interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy scores in the CKD group, were evaluated. Compared with healthy controls, patients with early CKD showed significantly lower VD, MV and PI (all p < 0.001). Among CEUS-derived time-intensity curve parameters, peak enhancement and wash-in perfusion were also significantly reduced (both p < 0.001), whereas time-related parameters showed no significant between-group differences. Among individual variables, VD yielded the best diagnostic performance (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] = 0.86; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.74-0.95). The SR-CEUS model (VD + MV + PI) achieved the highest diagnostic accuracy (AUC = 0.94; 95% CI: 0.88-0.99), significantly outperforming the CEUS model (AUC = 0.82, p = 0.030) and eGFR (AUC = 0.75, p = 0.003). Across all participants, VD showed the strongest positive correlation with eGFR (r = 0.58, p < 0.001). In the CKD group, VD (r = -0.61), MV (r = -0.44), peak enhancement (r = -0.44) and wash-in perfusion (r = -0.36) were significantly negatively correlated with interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy scores. SR-CEUS enables non-invasive visualization and quantitative assessment of renal cortical microvascular alterations in early CKD. Compared with conventional CEUS and serum biomarkers, SR-CEUS demonstrated superior diagnostic performance for detecting microvascular impairment in patients with preserved eGFR. These findings suggest that SR-CEUS may serve as a sensitive imaging biomarker for the early non-invasive assessment of CKD-related microvascular injury.

PubMedAmerican journal of speech-language pathology2026-07-08

Variability of Preschool Stuttering During a Day.

Onslow Mark M, Thambyaiyah Jessica J, O'Brian Sue S, Packman Ann A et al.

Severity ratings (SRs) of children's stuttering assigned by parents and speech-language pathologists (SLPs) have advantages over methods based on stuttering counts. They are valid, simple, and convenient; without cost; and can be used without the child's awareness. The aim of this project was to study, for the first time, the use of an SR scale by parents and SLPs to track stuttering severity for preschool children over a typical day. For that purpose, we used 10 case studies. Participants were 10 preschool children who stuttered (3-4 years of age) and their parents. Each child's speech was audio-recorded by their parent for an entire day at home, commencing at approximately 8:00 a.m. During that day, an SLP made a randomly timed phone call, during which a 10-min sample of the child's speech was audio-recorded. At the end of the day, both before and after training in the use of a 10-point scale, parents assigned a "typical" SR score for their child's speech for the day. An independent SLP later assigned an SR to each 15-min segment of each child's recording from across the day. The severity of all children's stuttering varied throughout the day, and in more than half the children, it varied by as much as 4-6 SR scale values. SRs showed no consistent trend of stuttering increasing or decreasing during the day. There was close correspondence between parent- and SLP-assigned SRs for the day. Parent training in the use of the scale, which occurred at the end of the day of recording, did not change that correspondence. A random 10-min speech sample provided a reasonably valid SR score to represent typical stuttering for the entire day. These findings can be applied in clinical and research contexts where measurement of early stuttering may be used to monitor a child's speech for a substantive period.

PubMedLa Radiologia medica2026-07-08

Request and reporting models for computed tomography in the multidisciplinary management of cancer patients: consensus between the Italian Society of Medical and Interventional Radiology (SIRM) and the Italian Society of Medical Oncology (AIOM).

Granata Vincenza V, Serafini Alessandro A, Fusco Roberta R, Caruso Damiano D et al.

Multidisciplinary management of oncological patients has improved patient outcomes, responding effectively and efficiently to the patient's health needs. A critical element remains adequate communication, also between radiologist and oncologist, which promotes correct patient management. The Italian Society of Medical Oncology (AIOM) and the Italian Society of Medical and Interventional Radiology (SIRM) have created a working group of representative members to improve not only communication between the two categories but, above all, to allow each member of the different categories to benefit from guidelines of good clinical practice both for filling out the examination request form than the radiological report, and therefore, also allowing clinicians and radiologists who do not work in reference centers, to correctly manage patients in the various phases of their oncological path. A panel of expert oncologists (AIOM members) and radiologists (SIRM members) was established. Multi-round consensus-building Delphi exercise was performed to create a comprehensive structured report (SR) template and a comprehensive requesting model for computed tomography (CT). The requesting model was divided into six sections: (a) oncological family history; (b) relevant clinical data; (c) staging; (d) re-staging; (e) other reason; and (f) follow-up. Regarding CT SR, 3 models were proposed: (1) for staging; (2) for treatment evaluation, and (3) for follow-up. CT SR in staging phase was divided into nine sections: (a) primary tumor; (b) lymph node metastases; (c) liver metastases; (d) lung metastases; (e) brain metastases; (f) other organs (incl. skeleton) metastases; (g) peritoneum; (h) incidental findings and complications; and (i) conclusion. CT SR in treatment evaluation phase was divided into ten sections: (a) primary tumor; (b) lymph node metastases; (c) liver metastases; (d) lung metastases; (e) brain metastases; (f) other organs (incl. skeleton) metastases; (g) peritoneum; (h) treatment-related complication; (i) incidental findings; and (l) conclusion. CT SR in follow-up phase was divided into six sections: (a) appearance of lesions; (b) node metastases; (c) liver lesions; (d) peritoneum; (e) incidental findings and complications; and (f) conclusion. Cronbach's alpha (Cα) correlation coefficient was used to evaluate internal consistency for each item and the quality analysis according to the average inter-item correlation. Each expert expressed individual comments for each specific template section by using a four-point scale (0 = strongly disagree, 1 = slightly disagree, 2 = modestly agree, 3 = strongly agree). With regard to the 3 CT SR reports, at the first round, all sections achieved ratings above the "good" level. The staging items showing the highest level of agreement among experts in the first round were lung metastases and incidental findings and complications. For treatment evaluation, the items with the highest agreement were treatment-related complication and incidental findings. For follow-up, the items with the highest agreement were appearance of lesions and incidental findings and complications. At the first round, Cronbach's alpha (Cα) correlation coefficients were 0.92, 0.95, and 0.90 for staging, re-staging, and follow-up, respectively. At the second round, all sections achieved ratings at the "excellent" level. Regarding requesting model, at first round, all sections received an overall score equal to or greater than the level defined as "good" (score = 2). The item that showed the highest level of agreement in the first round was the follow-up section, with a mean value of 2.75 ± 0.62. The correlation coefficient, Cronbach's alpha (Cα), was 0.75. In the second round, for both the CT SR report and the oncologist request template, all elements received "excellent" ratings. During the inter-society agreement, six AIOM members assessed the CT SR model developed by SIRM, while six SIRM members evaluated the CT requesting model proposed by AIOM. In this single Delphi round, all participants assigned the maximum score (3) to every item across all sections. The inter-society collaboration between AIOM and SIRM is a milestone in improving communication between radiologists and oncologists. The CT request and reporting documents meet the needs of quality care even outside of referral centers, and although do not represent an obligation, they can facilitate understanding between the different categories of professionals involved in patient management.

PubMedJournal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners2026-07-08

Emergency department utilization among unhoused individuals: Impact of a nurse practitioner faculty led/student-run clinic.

Torres Lindsey L, Rutledge Carolyn C, Zimbro Kathie K, Hebron Saran S et al.

Unhoused individuals experience higher morbidity and mortality due to chronic conditions, injuries, untreated mental health conditions, and unmet social need leading to increased emergency department (ED) utilization. Although local organizations provide services like food and shelter to region's unhoused, they lack integrated health care services. This contributes to the ED usage of this population for nonemergent care. A nonexperimental causal-comparative retrospective design was used to analyze data from reginal EDs. A total of 252 clients served were identified and evaluated for ED utilization and diagnoses. Differences in ED usage between the days of clinic operation were evaluated. A Nurse Practitioner (NP) Faculty-Led Student Run (NPF/SR) fee clinic was established withing a faith-based organization to offer integrated comprehensive services for the unhoused and provide educational opportunities NP students. The study demonstrated that participants who attended the NP Faculty-Led Student Run clinic, compared with those that had not, had higher ED utilization rates. However, 83.8% of all ED visits occurred when the clinic was closed. Of 735 visits, 67.6% were no emergent. Mental health conditions, acute illnesses, wounds, and dental complaints were most prevalent. Findings support NPF/SR as a cost-effective method to address health care needs of the unhoused. Results demonstrated the need to increase operating hours and expand services.

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