@article{3e2101aa2ad443d99c275d7608d31f13,
title = "Interaction of Chloramphenicol and Metabolites with Colony Stimulating Factors: Possible Role in Chloramphenicol-Induced Bone Marrow Injury",
author = "J.J. Jimenez and J.G. Jimenez and D. Daghistani and A.A. Yunis",
note = "We have recently demonstrated that two chloramphenicol (CAP) metabolites known to be produced by intestinal bacteria, de-hydro-CAP (DH-CAP) and nitrophenylaminopropane (NPAP), are milch more cytotoxic to bone marrow in vitro than CAP itself. Since colony stimulating factors (CSFs) play an essential role in hematopoietic cell growth, toxicity from CAP metabolites could also involve interaction with CSF or CSF-producing cells.",
year = "1990",
month = jan,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1097/00000441-199012000-00002",
language = "American English",
volume = "300",
journal = "The American Journal of the Medical Sciences",
}