920 resultados para ALLERGY
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Sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
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A report to the U. S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Mar.-Sept. 1967.
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"PB 176 814."
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In 1999, more than 50 organizations joined the Illinois Department of Public Health to form the Illinois Asthma Partnership. The group has grown and now comprises more than 100 members, who, using a public health approach, developed an asthma plan for Illinois. The plan's overarching goal is to reduce asthma morbidity and mortality in Illinois through implementation of best practices.
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A report by the Illinois Dept. of Public Health to the Illinois General Assembly about the development and implementation of a program prepared in response to Public Act 91-0515 which calls for the IDPH to create an asthma information program whose actions will be coordinated with those of state and community-based agencies involved with asthma and that would subsequently form the Illinois Asthma Task Force and target population groups in Illinois that are at high risk for asthma.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vol. for 2000 accompanied by separate appendix: Alignments of CTL epitopes.
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"January 1981."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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Tennis played at an elite level requires intensive training characterized by repeated bouts of brief intermittent high intensity exercise over relatively long periods of time (1 - 3 h or more). Competition can place additional stress on players. The purpose of this study was to investigate the temporal association between specific components of tennis training and competition, the incidence of upper respiratory tract infections (URT1), and salivary IgA, in a cohort of seventeen elite female tennis players. Timed, whole unstimulated saliva samples were collected before and after selected 1-h training sessions at 2 weekly intervals, over 12 weeks. Salivary IgA concentration was measured by ELISA and IgA secretion rate calculated (mug IgA x ml(-1) x ml saliva x min(-1)). Players reported URTI symptoms and recorded training and competition in daily logs. Data analysis showed that higher incidence of URTI was significantly associated with increased training duration and load, and competition level, on a weekly basis. Salivary IgA secretion rate (S-IgA) dropped significantly after 1 hour of tennis play. Over the 12-week period, pre-exercise salivary IgA concentration and secretion rate were directly associated with the amount of training undertaken during the previous day and week (p < 0.05). However, the decline in S-IgA after 1 h of intense tennis play was also positively related to the duration and load of training undertaken during the previous day and week (p < 0.05). Although exercise-induced suppression of salivary IgA may be a risk factor, it could not accurately predict the occurrence of URTI in this cohort of athletes.