321 resultados para Flaccid paralysis


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"February 1995."

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Title varies: 1908, The occurrence of infantile paralysis in Massachusetts.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Postcard advertising Jack Kevorkian's exhibit at the Armenian Library and Museum of America in Watertown, Mass., September 19 through October 24, 1999. On front of the postcard is a reproduction of Kevorkian's painting "Paralysis"

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Verso of a postcard advertising Jack Kevorkian's exhibit at the Armenian Library and Museum of America in Watertown, Mass., September 19 through October 24, 1999. On front of the postcard is a reproduction of Kevorkian's painting "Paralysis."

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Color photograph of painting by Jack Kevorkian "Paralysis" (oil, between 1963 and 1966) Painting was stolen from Kevorkian's storage in Long Beach, CA in circa 1989.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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No Abstract

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A three-year-old male neutered British Shorthair cat was treated for tick paralysis caused by L holocyclus. Ten days after discharge, the cat represented with left-sided congestive heart failure and was diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, characterised by diastolic dysfunction. It has been proposed that tick toxicity is associated with diastolic dysfunction and it is possible that residual toxin effects were a contributing factor to the development of left-sided congestive heart failure in this case.

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By focusing on developments between 1996 and 2006, this paper explains the reasons for one of Australia’s public health inconsistencies, the comparatively low adoption of adjusted water fluoridation in Queensland. As such, this work involved literature review and traditional historical method. In Queensland, parliamentary support for water fluoridation is conditional on community approval. Political ambivalence and the constraints of the “Fluoridation of Public Water Supplies Act (1963)” Qld have hindered the advocacy of water fluoridation. The political circumstance surrounding the “Lord Mayor’s Taskforce on Fluoridation Report” (1997) influenced its findings and confirms that Australia’s biggest local authority, the Brisbane City Council, failed to authoritatively analyse water fluoridation. In 2004, a private member’s bill to mandate fluoridation failed in a spectacular fashion. In 2005, an official systems review of Queensland Health recommended public debate about water fluoridation. Our principal conclusion is that without mandatory legislation, widespread implementationof water fluoridation in Queensland is most unlikely.