Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity is a pharmacological drug class in the Physiologic Effect taxonomy containing 3 drugs such as azelaic acid, clindamycin, erythromycin.

Physiologic Effect · N0000009982

Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity

Pharmacological class containing 3 drugs per the Physiologic Effect taxonomy.

Drugs in this class (3)

Need clinical context — common uses, side effects, or interactions for this class?

Ask GoDavaii AI about Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity

Common questions about Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity

What is the Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity drug class?
Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity is a pharmacological class in the Physiologic Effect taxonomy, classification code N0000009982. It groups 3 drugs that share a similar mechanism of action, chemical structure, or therapeutic use.
Which drugs are part of the Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity class?
Notable drugs in the Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity class include azelaic acid, clindamycin, erythromycin. The complete member list is shown above on this page; tap any drug name to see its full Indian-context information sheet.
What does Physiologic Effect mean?
Physiologic Effect is one of the standard taxonomies used by the NIH National Library of Medicine to organise drugs. Different taxonomies group drugs by different criteria - some by chemical structure, some by what they do in the body, some by therapeutic intent. Together these classifications make medical research, prescribing and education more consistent across the world.
Where can I get plain-language clinical context for the Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity class?
For plain-language clinical context - common uses, side effects, drug interactions and what the class means for an Indian patient - ask GoDavaii's Health AI. It works in 22+ Indian languages, is free and needs no signup. Tap "Ask GoDavaii AI about Decreased Sebaceous Gland Activity" above.

Source: NIH RxClass — National Library of Medicine, public domain. Class taxonomy: Physiologic Effect. View on RxClass ↗