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1,131 results
  1. ... of weight gain and increased the risk of clinically significant weight gain when compared with placebo at the end of ...
  2. ... Table 154 ). There was also evidence for statistically significant adverse events associated with low dose antipsychotics as follows: clinically relevant weight gain, continuous measure of weight gain and increased appetite ( ...
  3. ... Olsen 2007 looked at the ability of seven clinically used criteria for ‘moderate’ failure to thrive to identify significant undernutrition defined as the combination of slow conditional weight gain and low BMI: body mass index < 9 th ...
  4. ... seven postexposure days. They soon began a normal weight gain and remained clinically healthy until the time of necropsy. No significant gross lesions were observed during a detailed gross ...
  5. ... et al 2017 ]. With non-volitional feeding, too rapid and excessive weight gain ... this is most significant for lower extremity asymmetry because of the impact ...
  6. NLM Digital Collections - Penicillin 
    Publication: [Washington] : United States Office of War Information, 1944
    ... 30 Kg. A loss of 10 Kg. is clinically obvious. Muscle atrophy and loss of strength precede weight loss, and restoration of muscle bulk and strength appear prior to significant weight gain during convalescence. The distribution of extracellular body fluids ...
  7. NLM Digital Collections - Reducing Tobacco Use: A Report of the Surgeon General 
    Publication: United States. Public Health Service. Office of the Surgeon General, 2000
    ... scale might be used as a process measure. Clinically significant outcome measures in- clude attempts at quitting and abstinence success. Withdrawal symptom severity and concomitants of cessation attempts, such as weight gain, may be viewed as outcomes as well. Some ...
  8. NLM Digital Collections - Reducing Tobacco Use: A Report of the Surgeon General (pages 78-102) 
    Publication: United States. Public Health Service. Office of the Surgeon General, 2000
    ... scale might be used as a process measure. Clinically significant outcome measures in- clude attempts at quitting and abstinence success. Withdrawal symptom severity and concomitants of cessation attempts, such as weight gain, may be viewed as outcomes as well. Some ...
  9. ... 6) decreased heart rate (7) increased appetite or weight gain SOURCE: Condensed from the American Psychiatric Association (1987). The signs and symptoms of nicotine withdrawal are observable; they are often of clinically significant magnitude and occur in self-quitters as well ...
  10. ... 6) decreased heart rate (7) increased appetite or weight gain SOURCE: Condensed from the American Psychiatric Association (1987). The signs and symptoms of nicotine withdrawal are observable; they are often of clinically significant magnitude and occur in self-quitters as well ...
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