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The electrocardiogram of a camel

American Heart Journal, 1958
Abstract Electrocardiograms of a Camelus dromedarius were obtained at rest and after effort. The voltage of P-QRS-T was similar to that of the human electrocardiogram. The characteristic features were: bradycardia (26 per minute), normal width of QRS complexes, and prolonged P-R and Q-T intervals; the duration of these latter two intervals was ...
K, BRAUN, S Z, ROSENBERG, L, BELLIN
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Brucellosis in camels

Research in Veterinary Science, 2012
Camels are highly susceptible to brucellosis caused by Brucella melitensis and Brucella abortus. Difficulties can arise in diagnosis of camel brucellosis, especially as this disease provokes only few clinical signs in contrast to its clinical course in cattle.
Mayada, Gwida   +5 more
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CAMEL to CAMELS: The risk of sensitivity

Journal of Banking Regulation, 2016
Most bank regulatory regimes added interest rate risk or sensitivity to their examination focus in the mid-1990s. Interest rate risk significantly contributed to the demise of the US savings and loan industry in the 1980s and 1990s and that episode alone warranted additional focus on sensitivity. However, interest rate risk is not as important as asset
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Dermatophytosis of camels

Medical Mycology, 1986
A survey of ringworm in camels showed over 25% of young animals suffered from T. verrucosum infection, and fewer than 0.5% of the camels had T. mentagrophytes. Amino acid analyses of hair samples taken from human, camel and cow showed the compositions were similar to within 11%.
E S, Kuttin   +4 more
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SI units? A camel is a camel

Journal of Chemical Education, 1978
This paper is a summary of remarks made at a recent symposium on "New Directions in the Teaching of Physical Chemistry" in which the author took exception to both the claims made for the SI system and to the manner in which it has been promoted.
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The Camel Capillary

Nature, 1964
VARIOUS mechanisms have been proposed to explain the ability of the camel to survive the dehydration stresses of desert life. The use of the fatty hump as a water store has been excluded because calculations of the volume of water released from the metabolic breakdown of this amount of fat do not coincide with the measured losses of body water1 ...
P, MONTGOMERY   +2 more
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Camel hunting or camel raiding?

Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy, 1990
Recently, several depictions of camels pursued by horsemen with spears have been interpreted as hunting scenes. References to ethnographic descriptions of bedouin life in the 19th and early 20th centuries suggest these may in fact be scenes of raiding rather than hunting.
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The Camel's Erythrocyte

Nature, 1963
THE camel's ability to live without water for long periods is outstanding1,2,4,6. It can lose about 30 per cent of its body-weight during dehydration in the desert and still move about12. A dehydrated camel can regain its losses of water (about 30 gallons) in about 10 min and resume its normal appearance; despite the large flow of water into the ...
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