Results 291 to 300 of about 3,896,062 (358)
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Oxygen Consumption of Ectoprocts

Nature, 1967
Mangum and Schopf1 have reported oxygen consumption rates for a representative species of ectoproct, Bugula turrita. They found considerable discrepancy between their measured value and that predicted from a model they proposed based on ectoproct morphology.
T A, Massaro, I, Fatt
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Maximum oxygen consumption at altitude

Internationale Zeitschrift f�r Angewandte Physiologie Einschliesslich Arbeitsphysiologie, 1961
On 11 subjects, members of an Himalayan expedition, observations have been collected on maximum oxygen consumption (\(\dot V_{O_2 } ^{\max } \)) and some respiratory and circulatory characters at sea level and at altitude after a 60 days acclimatization period.
P, CERRETELLI, R, MARGARIA
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Oxygen consumption-oxygen delivery relationship in children

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1993
We examined the relationship between oxygen consumption (VO2) and oxygen delivery (DO2) over a range of metabolic demand in two groups of children. We studied 15 children after cardiac surgery (plasma lactate levels < 2.2 mmol/L, VO2 < 6 ml/min per kilogram, oxygen extraction ratio < 25%); 8 were given transfusions with erythrocytes, 10 to 15 ml/kg ...
M, Seear, D, Wensley, A, MacNab
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Oxygen consumption.

Cardiologia (Rome, Italy), 1999
It gets more and more frequent to use oxygen consumption (VO2) to evaluate exercise capacity and response to treatment in heart failure patients. The amount of VO2 is due to ventilation, oxygen transport and muscle activity. No one of these single steps can define by itself VO2, but all these physiological functions are integrated each other.
P. G. Agostoni   +8 more
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The estimation of oxygen consumption

Cardiovascular Research, 1970
Improved estimates of the indexed rate of oxygen consumption ( V O2/BSA) are provided for use in calculating haemodynamic quantities in cardiac catheterization. They were derived from a multivariate analysis of covariance applied to 879 patients, mostly children, with a wide variety of heart diseases.
C G, LaFarge, O S, Miettinen
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Oxygen consumption in diapausing blastocysts

Journal of Cellular Physiology, 1967
AbstractThe oxygen consumption of various diapausing blastocysts from mammals having delayed implantation (mink, northern fur seal, black bear, armadillo and lactating rat) was studied with the Cartesian diver apparatus and compared with that of blastocysts from mammals where implantation is not delayed (rabbit, nonlactating rat).
B J, Gulyas, J C, Daniel
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OXYGEN CONSUMPTION IN INFANT MALNUTRITION

Pediatrics, 1964
Oxygen consumption was determined with a closed circuit apparatus in 52 normal infants and 22 marasmatic infants. Oxygen consumption in marasmatic infants was similar to that of the normal ones when expressed in relation to the actual weight, but was significantly lower if expressed in regard to height.
F, MOENCKEBERG   +4 more
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Oxygen consumption of pial arteries

American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1979
Pial arterioles and arteries, normally responsive to alterations in PaCO2, were obtained by microdissection from the parietal cortex of 53 anesthetized cats. The oxygen consumption of these vessels, determined with the Cartesian diver microrespirometer, was found to be size dependent.
R M, Navari   +3 more
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