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Anticholinergic
(redirected from Anticholinergic agents)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.04 sec.
anticholinergic /an·ti·cho·lin·er·gic/ (-ko?lin-er´jik) parasympatholytic; blocking the passage of impulses through the parasympathetic nerves; also, an agent that so acts.
an·ti·cho·lin·er·gic (nt-kl-nûrjk, nt-)
n.
An agent that is antagonistic to the action of parasympathetic or other cholinergic nerve fibers.

Anticholinergic
Blocking the action of the neurohormone acetylcholine. The most obvious effects include dry mouth and dry eyes.

anticholinergic (an´tīkō´linur´jik),
n (parasympatholytic, cholinolytic), a drug that acts to inhibit the effects of the neurohormone acetylcholine or to inhibit its cholinergic neuroeffects. A cholinergic blocking agent.

anticholinergic
blockade of acetylcholine receptors, resulting in the inhibition of the transmission of parasympathetic nerve impulses; parasympatholytic. Used most commonly in the nonspecific treatment of vomiting or diarrhea; includes atropine, propantheline, scopolamine, isopropamide.

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Plasma cholinesterase is substantially more sensitive to anticholinergic agents than red cell cholinesterase, whereas the latter more closely reflects the activity of cholinesterase enzymes within the nervous system.
[5] One is to prescribe drug therapy with systemic and topical anticholinergic agents to diminish sweat gland function.
 
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