Activated Charcoal Ammonium Carbonate Camphor Crot

證據等級: L5 預測適應症: 0

目錄

  1. Activated Charcoal Ammonium Carbonate Camphor Crot
  2. Multi-Component Homeopathic Mixture: No TxGNN Repurposing Prediction Available
    1. One-Sentence Summary
    2. Quick Overview
    3. Component Breakdown
    4. Why No Prediction Was Generated
    5. Safety Considerations
    6. Conclusion and Next Steps
    7. Disclaimer

## 藥師評估報告

Multi-Component Homeopathic Mixture: No TxGNN Repurposing Prediction Available

One-Sentence Summary

This candidate is a complex 8-component mixture — including rattlesnake venom, hydrogen cyanide, veratrum album root, and tobacco leaf — whose composition is consistent with a homeopathic complex remedy. The TxGNN model generated no repurposing predictions for this candidate because it could not be resolved to a DrugBank node. Without a valid drug identity or predicted indication, a formal repurposing evaluation cannot be completed at this time.


Quick Overview

Item Content
Original Indication Not available — no regulatory records found
Predicted New Indication None — no TxGNN predictions generated
TxGNN Prediction Score N/A
Evidence Level Below L5 — no predictions available
US Market Status Not Marketed
Number of NDAs 0
Recommended Decision Hold

Component Breakdown

The INN field contains 8 substances. Each is listed below with its likely role:

Component Pharmacological Category Notes
Activated Charcoal Gastrointestinal adsorbent / antidote Standard clinical use in poisoning; homeopathic counterpart: Carbo vegetabilis
Ammonium Carbonate Expectorant / respiratory stimulant Homeopathic: Ammonium carbonicum
Camphor Local counterirritant / antiseptic Homeopathic use in circulatory collapse states
Crotalus durissus terrificus Venom Snake venom (proteolytic) Homeopathic use for hemorrhagic and septic conditions
Hydrogen Cyanide Acutely toxic chemical (mitochondrial poison) Homeopathic: Acidum hydrocyanicum — used in ultra-diluted form only
Spigelia anthelmia Medicinal plant (anthelmintic, cardiac) Homeopathic: eye and heart indications
Tobacco Leaf (Nicotiana tabacum) Nicotinic agonist Homeopathic: Tabacum — nausea, vertigo, cardiovascular
Veratrum album Root Toxic plant — steroidal alkaloids (veratrine) Homeopathic: collapse, bradycardia, cholera-like states

This combination pattern — particularly the inclusion of venom, highly toxic plant alkaloids, and hydrogen cyanide — is characteristic of a complex homeopathic nosode or constitutional remedy. None of these components, taken as a fixed combination, correspond to a single DrugBank-registered pharmaceutical entity.


Why No Prediction Was Generated

TxGNN constructs predictions by traversing a drug–disease knowledge graph in which each drug must correspond to a registered DrugBank node. This pipeline step failed for the following reasons:

  1. DrugBank ID could not be resolved — the drugbank_id field is null. The DrugBank query returned 1 result (result_count: 1), suggesting a partial keyword match, but no confirmed entity ID was assigned.
  2. No graph node, no traversal — without a valid node, TxGNN has no edge relationships to score against disease nodes.
  3. Predicted indications array is empty — zero candidate diseases were generated.

As a result, all downstream sections (clinical trial evidence, literature evidence, cytotoxicity, mechanism analysis) have no data to populate and are omitted per the reporting rules.


Safety Considerations

All safety fields are in data-gap status. Based on the known pharmacology of the raw components:

  • Hydrogen cyanide inhibits cytochrome c oxidase and is acutely lethal at microgram doses in conventional form.
  • Crotalus durissus terrificus venom contains phospholipases and crotoxin with neurotoxic and hemorrhagic activity.
  • Veratrum album alkaloids (veratrine, protoveratrine) cause severe bradycardia and hypotension.
  • Camphor in excess causes CNS excitation and seizures.

Important caveat: If this product is a homeopathic formulation, the above substances are present at ultra-high dilutions (typically 6C to 200C), at which concentrations pharmacological activity is negligible by conventional standards. However, until the formulation type and dilution factors are confirmed, no safety assumptions can be made.

Please refer to the product package insert or contact the manufacturer for definitive safety information.


Conclusion and Next Steps

Decision: Hold

Rationale: This candidate could not be mapped to a DrugBank node, resulting in zero TxGNN predictions. A multi-component mixture with unresolved identity cannot enter the standard repurposing evaluation pipeline, and proceeding without a valid drug anchor would produce unreliable results.

To proceed, the following is needed:

  • Confirm product classification: Determine whether this is a homeopathic product (OTC nosode), a compounded formulation, or another category, and identify the applicable pharmacopoeia entry (e.g., HPUS — Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States).
  • Decompose and evaluate individually: Run TxGNN separately on each pharmacologically active component (e.g., crotalus venom, veratrum album, spigelia) that has a confirmed DrugBank entry, rather than the combination.
  • Resolve DrugBank partial match: Investigate the single DrugBank query hit (result_count: 1) to determine which component triggered the match and whether that match is sufficient for individual-component prediction.
  • Obtain package insert: Confirm dilution levels, route of administration, approved indication (if any), and manufacturer details before any regulatory or clinical pathway analysis.
  • Re-enter pipeline: Once individual components are mapped, rerun the evidence collection and TxGNN scoring on each resolvable entity and synthesize findings at the combination level.

    Disclaimer

This content is for research purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Clinical validation is required before any clinical application.



Copyright © 2026 UsTxGNN Project. For research purposes only.

This site uses Just the Docs, a documentation theme for Jekyll.