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Physiological Disorders

2022
Physiological ...
farina vittorio   +2 more
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Physiology of Membrane Disorders

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1979
This multiauthored book is large in size and vast in scope. It is divided into five parts, the final section being devoted to clinical disorders of membrane transport. The general level of scholarship is high. In common with other large multiauthored volumes, the quality and usefulness vary extensively from chapter to chapter (and from reader to reader)
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Physiology of Taste Disorders

Current Otorhinolaryngology Reports, 2016
Taste is integrated with retronasal olfaction in the brain to form flavor. Taste nerves are vulnerable to peripheral damage (e.g., otitis media, tonsillectomy, head injury, chemotherapy, radiotherapy), which can affect other oral sensations because of central interactions.
Linda M. Bartoshuk, Derek J. Snyder
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Physiological disorders

1993
chap.
de Hertogh, A.A., Le Nard, M.
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Tuber physiological disorders.

2014
Abstract Defects in potato tubers that are brought about by unfavourable environmental factors that alter normal plant and tuber growth are called physiological disorders. The major causes of physiological disorders include improper cultural, storage or handling practices, high or low temperatures, and inadequate, excessive or uneven soil ...
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Physiological Disorders

2023
Sunil Kumar   +3 more
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Disorders of Phosphate: Physiology

2013
Phosphate and phosphorus are generally used interchangeably. Phosphate, although not as abundant as Ca2+, is an important constituent of the body. It plays a significant role in mitochondrial respiration and oxidative phosphorylation. Phosphate constitutes approximately 1 % of the body weight. A 70-kg man contains about 700 g of phosphate.
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Disorders of Calcium: Physiology

2013
Calcium (Ca2+) is the most abundant divalent ion in the body. Approximately 1.2–1.3 kg of Ca2+ is present in a 70-kg individual. Of this amount, 99 % is present in the bone in the form of hydroxyapatite (Ca10(PO4)6 (OH)2), and the remaining 1 % is found in the teeth, soft tissues, plasma, and cells. The plasma (serum) Ca2+ concentration (abbreviated as
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Disorders of Magnesium: Physiology

2013
Magnesium (Mg2+) is the second most common intracellular cation next to K+ in the body. A 70-kg individual has approximately 25 g of Mg2+. About 67 % of this Mg2+ is present in bone, about 20 % in muscle, and 12 % in other tissues such as the liver. Only 1–2 % is present in the extracellular space. In plasma, Mg2+ exists as free (60 %) and bound (40 %)
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