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John Caldwell

Researcher at Imperial College London

Publications -  227
Citations -  7112

John Caldwell is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metabolite & Excretion. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 223 publications receiving 6801 citations. Previous affiliations of John Caldwell include University of Ibadan & University of Liverpool.

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Putting chirality to work: the strategy of chiral switches

TL;DR: Most of the new drugs reaching the market today are single enantiomers, rather than the racemic mixtures that dominated up to ten years ago, but there are also important examples of new single-enantiomer drugs derived from 'chiral switches' of established racemates.
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The metabolic chiral inversion and dispositional enantioselectivity of the 2-arylpropionic acids and their biological consequences.

TL;DR: The biological consequences of the metabolic chiral inversion and enantioselective disposition of the 2-arylpropionates have been summarized in terms of their implications for the development and use of safer and more effective drugs of this class.
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Metabolism of [14C]methamphetamine in man, the guinea pig and the rat

TL;DR: The main reaction in the rat was aromatic hydroxylation, in the guinea pig demethylation and deamination, whereas in man much of the drug, possibly one-half, was excreted unchanged, and Marked species differences in the metabolism of methamphetamine were observed.
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Hepatic adducts, circulating antibodies, and cytokine polymorphisms in patients with diclofenac hepatotoxicity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the potential role played by the immune processes and found that polymorphisms in genes encoding cytokine-related proteins influence susceptibility to hepatotoxicity, resulting in low IL-10 and high IL-4 gene transcription, could favor a T helper mediated antibody response to neoantigenic stimulation associated with disease susceptibility.