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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

An investigation of leg pain ('Growing pains') in children aged four to six years /

Evans, Angela Margaret. Unknown Date (has links)
Growing pains has been reported in the medical literature since 1823 with frequent, subsequent and ongoing inclusion ever since. Suffering from ill definition, unknown aetiology and being the subject of many poorly conducted studies, growing pains has endured the gamut of being associated with endocarditis to being dismissed as nebulous and even mythical. Management of this condition, which has been reported to occupy 1-2 % of visits to health professionals, is ad hoc and limited and best evidence not usually implemented. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2005.
2

An investigation of leg pain ('Growing pains') in children aged four to six years

Evans, Angela M January 2005 (has links)
Growing pains has been reported in the medical literature since 1823 with frequent, subsequent and ongoing inclusion ever since. Suffering from ill definition, unknown aetiology and being the subject of many poorly conducted studies, growing pains has endured the gamut of being associated with endocarditis to being dismissed as nebulous and even mythical. Management of this condition, which has been reported to occupy 1-2 % of visits to health professionals, is ad hoc and limited and best evidence not usually implemented. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2005
3

The effect of various lifting intensities in release of human growth hormone

Kang, Ho-Yuol January 1990 (has links)
This study was desined to measure the effect of various intensities of leg-press exercise and squat exercise on hGH release. Young, 24 ± .7 yrs of age, male lifters (n=3) served as subjects for this study. After a 1 RM was established on the weight sled and squat rack they completed a 3 RM, 10 RM, or 25 RM workout using a 3 set protocol. Each workout (3, 10, squat exercises were separated by 2 weeks. Blood was taken from an antecubital vein prior to exercise (pre-exercise, after warm-up, and post-exercise 4, 8, 16 MIN). The serum was measured for hGH levels. The results indicate that 1) High intensity exercise of a short duration will not elicit a hGH response indicating that exercise duration is more important than exercise intensity, 2) The hGH output, in part, depends on exercise intensity when exercise duration is sufficient to elicit hGH response, and 3) The increased lactic acid during resistance exercise did not relate to hGH levels. / School of Physical Education
4

An investigation of leg pain ('Growing pains') in children aged four to six years

Evans, Angela M January 2005 (has links)
Growing pains has been reported in the medical literature since 1823 with frequent, subsequent and ongoing inclusion ever since. Suffering from ill definition, unknown aetiology and being the subject of many poorly conducted studies, growing pains has endured the gamut of being associated with endocarditis to being dismissed as nebulous and even mythical. Management of this condition, which has been reported to occupy 1-2 % of visits to health professionals, is ad hoc and limited and best evidence not usually implemented. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2005
5

An investigation of leg pain ('Growing pains') in children aged four to six years

Evans, Angela M January 2005 (has links)
Growing pains has been reported in the medical literature since 1823 with frequent, subsequent and ongoing inclusion ever since. Suffering from ill definition, unknown aetiology and being the subject of many poorly conducted studies, growing pains has endured the gamut of being associated with endocarditis to being dismissed as nebulous and even mythical. Management of this condition, which has been reported to occupy 1-2 % of visits to health professionals, is ad hoc and limited and best evidence not usually implemented. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2005
6

Process development for downstream processing of human growth hormone and its antagonist

Zheng, Yizhou. January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio University, November, 1994. / Title from PDF t.p.
7

Dental age determination in South Australian children : thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Dental Surgery /

Stephen, Soni. January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.D.S.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Dentistry, 1999. / Bibliography: leaves 158-182.
8

A Library of Hydrocarbon-stapled Peptide Antagonists of the Human Growth Hormone Receptor

Pettis, Joseph A. 16 May 2023 (has links)
No description available.
9

Zinc status and functional correlates in preschool and school-aged children in Egypt.

Mohs, Mary Ellen. January 1989 (has links)
Zinc status of Egyptian children 18-30 months and 6-10 years of age was characterized in relation to morbidity, growth, and socioeconomic variables. In a pilot study of children whose general nutrition ranged from adequately nourished to moderately malnourished, mean hair zinc was 135 ug/g (63-230 ug/g), with suboptimal zinc status suggested for 44%. Predictors of hair and serum zinc levels were explored for 23 school-aged and 40 preschool children. Included in models were weaning age for preschool children, body size (length- or height- and weight-for-age Z scores), current growth over 6 months or longer, illness experience over 10 to 12 months, demographic variables affecting food availability and distribution, sex, and season. Data were collected by Egyptian workers as part of a larger field project. Hair and serum samples were analyzed for zinc content by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Results showed no difference in hair zinc levels by color, presence or absence of louse egg fragments and mucilage, or presence or absence of henna dye. In multiple regression models, the best predictor of hair zinc in preschool children was season of year, with zinc lower in summer. Season, negative effect of percent of weeks ill with diarrhea, and positive effects of socioeconomic status (SES) based on father's education/literacy and economic subsistence base excluding agriculture (ESB-A) predicted 23% of total hair zinc variation in preschool children. In preschool children serum zinc was lower in summer. Season, positive effect of rate of weight increase, and negative effects of rate of height increase, SES based on father's occupation(s) (SES2), and ESB-A predicted 53% of total serum zinc variation in preschool children. Serum zinc was higher in summer in school-aged children. Season, negative effect of SES2 and ESB-A, and positive effects of percent weeks ill with diarrhea and height for age Z scores predicted 60% of total serum zinc variation in school-age children. Negative effects of percent weeks ill with diarrhea and parents' age and child:adult ratio predicted 29% of hair zinc in school-aged children.
10

Parent-Teacher Attitudes Toward Sex Education and the Film, Human Growth

Harris, Marcille Hurst 06 1900 (has links)
65 pages

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