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Voice in Chronic Renal Failure
Journal of Voice, 2010Chronic renal failure affects various body systems, one of which is the respiratory system. Because respiration is the prime source for speech, vocal dysfunctions are expected to be present in patients with chronic renal failure. The present study attempts to shed light on the changes in acoustic and aerodynamic characteristics of voice, if any, in ...
Radish B. Kumar, Jayashree S. Bhat
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Chronic Renal Failure in Children
, 1973Among the 2,052 children with renal disease admitted to a Pediatric Department during a period of 10 years, 270 developed chronic renal failure (CRF).
R. Habib, M. Broyer, H. Benmaiz
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Anemia of Chronic Renal Failure
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1971To the Editor.— In your editorial "Anemia of Chronic Renal Failure," ( 214 :1880, 1970), you have chosen to quote Boddy et al who find decreased intestinal absorption of radioactive iron in patients with chronic renal failure, implying that this may be one of several important mechanisms in the etiology of this anemia.
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1988
Women with renal disease worry, naturally, about their own abilities to conceive and bear a healthy child, and about the effects of such a pregnancy on their own renal disease. The answers they receive from their doctors vary a good deal and, until recently, have been relatively pessimistic.
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Women with renal disease worry, naturally, about their own abilities to conceive and bear a healthy child, and about the effects of such a pregnancy on their own renal disease. The answers they receive from their doctors vary a good deal and, until recently, have been relatively pessimistic.
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1990
Chronic renal failure (CRF) is defined as the stage at which the irreversibly damaged kidneys are unable to maintain the homeostasis of the body. Patients with established CRF do not recover but instead experience a continuous loss of function, even when the original disease that damaged the kidneys is no longer active, as for example, obstructive ...
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Chronic renal failure (CRF) is defined as the stage at which the irreversibly damaged kidneys are unable to maintain the homeostasis of the body. Patients with established CRF do not recover but instead experience a continuous loss of function, even when the original disease that damaged the kidneys is no longer active, as for example, obstructive ...
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Accumulation of an endogenous inhibitor of nitric oxide synthesis in chronic renal failure
The Lancet, 1992A. Leone+4 more
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Oxidative stress in patients with cardiovascular disease and chronic renal failure
Free radical research, 2013A. Popolo+3 more
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