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The Oral Absorption of Water

Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1971
A perfusion system was designed whereby the oral cavity of the rabbit under urethane anesthesia could be exposed to water in isolation from the remaining gastrointestinal system and the nasal cavity. Tritiated water was recovered from one external jugular vein within 40 s of the commencement of oral perfusion.
T S, Miles, P G, Dellow
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Absorption of sound in sea water

Ultrasonics, 1963
Laboratory and field data on the absorption of sound in sea- water are reviewed in the light of modern theory, including effects of pressure, temperature and salinity. The effects of temperature and MgSO4 salt concentration appear to be compatible from one investigator to another.
M. Schulkin, H.W. Marsh
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ABSORPTION OF WATER-SOLUBLE VITAMINS

British Medical Bulletin, 1967
An account of the absorption of water-soluble vitamins must deal with the intestinal transport of a group of structurally unrelated compounds with widely different properties. The characteristics of absorption of several members of the group have not yet been adequately investigated. It is therefore difficult to make many valid generalizations.
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Absorption of water-soluble vitamins

Current Opinion in Gastroenterology, 2003
Water-soluble vitamins are required as enzyme cofactors in a wide variety of metabolic reactions. Riboflavin, niacin, and vitamin C are essential in redox reactions; thiamine and biotin are involved in macronutrient metabolism; and folate, vitamin B12, pyridoxine, and riboflavin play important roles in the regulation of S-adenosylmethionine production ...
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The Absorption and Diffusion of Water in Rubber

Rubber Chemistry and Technology, 1937
Abstract A new differential equation of diffusion is put forward to represent the movements of water vapor through rubber in accordance with the osmotic theory of absorption. Experiments are described which, together with the evidence quoted from existing knowledge, confirm a number of predictions as to differences between the absorption of a ...
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Intestinal absorption of water and electrolytes

Clinical Biochemistry, 1976
1. Recent advances in knowledge of intestinal physiology have provided some insight into disturbed mechanisms and their clinical effects; for example, diarrhoea can now be defined biochemically as excessive fluid and electrolyte loss due to their malabsorption or excessive secretion. 2.
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Water vapor absorption in insects

American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 1983
In common with other animals the principal examples of water transport in insects are to be found in processing food and in excretion. Some insects and other arthropods are able to absorb water vapor using preexisting buccal or rectal structures. This unique exploitation of atmospheric water depends on adequate areas for condensing water vapor and the
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Water Absorption of Elastomers

Rubber Chemistry and Technology, 1963
Abstract This study considers high temperature (160° C) water absorption in the absence of oxygen. Examination of the freezing behavior of water-swollen butyl gum vulcanizates shows the water to be disposed as discrete droplets of the order of 3µ diameter, corresponding in this case with soluble residues based on zinc.
G. J. Briggs   +2 more
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