Unidos Mexicanos: Farmacopea De Los Estados

The creation of the marked the beginning of the FEUM's modern era. This body, composed of experts from academia, the public sector, and the pharmaceutical industry, ensured that the FEUM would no longer be updated sporadically. Instead, it would be a dynamic, continuously evolving document. Since its creation, the FEUM has become "one of the most dynamic [pharmacopoeias] in the world," producing year-after-year publications that keep pace with the state of the art.

Alinea los estándares mexicanos con los de la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) y otras farmacopeas internacionales (como la USP de EE. UU. o la de la Unión Europea), facilitando la exportación e importación de insumos. farmacopea de los estados unidos mexicanos

Un medicamento puede ser perfecto, pero si el envase lo contamina o degrada, es inútil. La FEUM incluye monografías para frascos de vidrio tipo I, II y III, tapones de hule, blísteres de aluminio y plásticos. The creation of the marked the beginning of

Monographs for:

Long before the concept of a modern pharmacopoeia, the indigenous peoples of Mexico had organized systems of medicine. In Tenochtitlán, there existed a well-defined healthcare structure with specialists like tlama (physicians), papini (collectors of medicinal plants), and panamacani (preparers of medicines). This knowledge was famously compiled in 1552 by Martín de la Cruz in the Libellus de medicinalibus indorum herbis , a manuscript written in Nahuatl and later translated into Latin, documenting the preparation and uses of indigenous herbal remedies. Following Mexico's independence, the Formulario Magistral y Memorial Farmacéutico de Garssicourt was published in 1821, serving as a direct antecedent to a national pharmacopoeia. Since its creation, the FEUM has become "one

トップにスクロールします 英語