Results 301 to 310 of about 133,064 (320)
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Physiology of Lactation

Clinics in Perinatology, 1999
The physiology of human lactation is described with secretions on mammary gland anatomy and development, the mechanisms of milk secretion and ejection, and the temporal sequence of events during the transition from pregnancy to lactation (lactogenesis).
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Drugs in lactation

Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research, 2019
AbstractAlthough most medications can be taken safely during breastfeeding, potential risks of infant toxicity do exist because all medications will be excreted into the breast milk to some extent. The amount of medication excreted in the milk depends mainly on (i) within‐drug variation, such as dosing; (ii) between‐drug variation including chemical ...
Ruud H J Verstegen, Shinya Ito
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Lactation

Advances in Pediatrics, 1979
B L, Nichols, V N, Nichols
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Contraception and Lactation

Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health, 2007
The benefits of breastfeeding for both the infant and the mother are undisputed. Longer intervals between births decrease fetal/infant and maternal complications. Lactation is an effective contraceptive for the first 6 months postpartum only if women breastfeed exclusively and at regular intervals, including nighttime.
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The metabolism of lactate

NMR in Biomedicine, 1991
AbstractLactate contents of tissues can vary during normal physiological conditions in mammals from 0.5 to over 5 mM, and higher in pathological states, suitable for measurement by NMR. Lactate itself is a dead‐end metabolite, metabolized only by lactate dehydrogenase. The extent and direction of that reaction is determined by the free [NAD+]/[NADH][H+]
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THE HYPOTHALAMUS AND LACTATION

British Medical Bulletin, 1966
Various hypothalamic mechanisms are of importance to lactation. Foo d intake increases in lactation to meet the demand for raw materials in milk presumably at the direction of the appetite-controlling mechanisms in the hypothalamus. The direct astimulation of hypothalamic appetite centers may result from the suckling stimulus. Although the ascending
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LACTATION | Induced Lactation

2002
R.S. Kensinger, A.L. Magliaro
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Lactation

Archiv f�r Gyn�kologie, 1950
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Lactation | Induced Lactation

2011
R.S. Kensinger, A.L. Magliaro-Macrina
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LACTATIONAL INSANITY.

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1993
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