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Izuchenie sredinnykh struktur mozga i sistemy likvoroobrashcheniia v usloviiakh patologii tsentral'noi nervnoi sistemy 1996
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Arkh Patol
Periodical, Abbrev.
Arkh.Patol.
Pub Date Free Form
Volume
58
Issue
3
Start Page
30
Other Pages
3
Notes
ID: 8967839
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
Accession Number
Language
ru
SubFile
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
Abstract
The author offers an original method of the study of the midbrain structures and liquor circulation system (the third ventricle, brain water-pipe, the fourth ventricle) in the small cavity in the course of autopsy. The position of the middle structures is characterized by means of the angle measuring of their borders against bone structures of the base and vault of the skull. The method allows to assess morphometrically the degree of dislocation of the middle structures in pathological conditions accompanied by brain edema.
Descriptors
Central Nervous System Diseases/pathology, Mesencephalon/pathology, Brain Injuries/cerebrospinal fluid, Brain Injuries/pathology, Brain Mapping, Catheterization, Central Nervous System Diseases/cerebrospinal fluid, Cerebral Ventricles/pathology, Humans, Mesencephalon/anatomy & histology
Links
http://pesquisa.bvsalud.org/ghl/resource/en/mdl-8967839
Book Title
Database
MEDLINE; http://www.globalhealthlibrary.net/
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Dobrovol'skii,G.F.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Midbrain structures and the cerebrospinal fluid circulation system in central nervous system disease 1996 Dobrovol'skii, G.F.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Arkhiv Patologii
Periodical, Abbrev.
Arkh.Patol.
Pub Date Free Form
/
Volume
58
Issue
3
Start Page
30
Other Pages
33
Notes
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
0004-1955
Accession Number
Language
SubFile
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
Abstract
The author offers an original method of the study of the midbrain structures and liquor circulation system (the third ventricle, brain water-pipe, the fourth ventricle) in the small cavity in the course of autopsy. The position of the middle structures is characterized by means of the angle measuring of their borders against bone structures of the base and vault of the skull. The method allows to assess morphometrically the degree of dislocation of the middle structures in pathological conditions accompanied by brain edema.
Descriptors
article, brain injury, brain mapping, brain ventricle, catheterization, central nervous system disease, cerebrospinal fluid, histology, human, mesencephalon, pathology
Links
Book Title
Izuchenie sredinnykh struktur mozga i sistemy likvoroobrashcheniia v usloviiakh patologii tsentral'noi nervnoi sistemy.
Database
MEDLINE
Publisher
Data Source
Embase
Authors
Dobrovol'skii,G. F.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Risk factors for childhood asthma and wheezing. Importance of maternal and household smoking 1996 Department of Community Health, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Periodical, Abbrev.
Am.J.Respir.Crit.Care Med.
Pub Date Free Form
Sep
Volume
154
Issue
3 Pt 1
Start Page
681
Other Pages
688
Notes
LR: 20151119; JID: 9421642; 0 (Sodium Chloride, Dietary); 0 (Tobacco Smoke Pollution); AYI8EX34EU (Creatinine); K5161X06LL (Cotinine); ppublish
Place of Publication
UNITED STATES
ISSN/ISBN
1073-449X; 1073-449X
Accession Number
PMID: 8810605
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; AIM; IM
DOI
10.1164/ajrccm.154.3.8810605 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
8810605
Abstract
To identify modifiable risk factors for wheezing illness in childhood, the associations between current asthma or wheezing and factors such as household smoking, damp and dietary salt preference were measured in a questionnaire-based prevalence study of schoolchildren 7 to 9 yr of age in Cape Town. In a random sample of 15 schools, questionnaires were completed by parents of 1,955 children, from which 368 cases and 294 controls were selected on the basis of reported asthma diagnosis or symptoms. Urinary cotinine concentrations were measured, and the parents were interviewed. An exposure-response relationship between the urinary cotinine creatinine ratio and asthma/wheeze was observed. In multivariate analysis, predictors of asthma/wheeze were hay fever (odds ratio [OR] - 5.30; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.16 to 8.89), eczema (OR = 2.19; 95% CI = 1.33-3.62), parental asthma (OR = 1.77; 95% CI = 1.11 to 2.84), absence of paternal contribution to income (OR = 1.72; 95% CI = 1.17 to 2.54), maternal smoking in pregnancy (OR = 1.87; 95% CI = 1.25 to 2.81), and each additional household smoker (OR = 1.15; 95% CI = 1.01 to 1.30). Findings were similar, with higher odds ratios for most variables, except number of household smokers, when the group was restricted to children with parent-reported asthma. The findings confirm that household smoking is an important modifiable risk factor in asthma/wheeze among young schoolchildren, and they suggest that maternal smoking in pregnancy and current household exposure are independent contributors to this effect.
Descriptors
Asthma/epidemiology/etiology/genetics, Child, Cotinine/urine, Creatinine/urine, Female, Humans, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Pregnancy, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects, Prevalence, Random Allocation, Respiratory Sounds/etiology, Risk Factors, Sampling Studies, Smoking/epidemiology, Socioeconomic Factors, Sodium Chloride, Dietary/adverse effects, South Africa/epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Tobacco Smoke Pollution/adverse effects
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Ehrlich,R. I., Du Toit,D., Jordaan,E., Zwarenstein,M., Potter,P., Volmink,J. A., Weinberg,E.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Smoking among medical students in Tunisia: trends in behavior and attitudes 1996 Centre national de formation pedagogique des cadres de la sante, El Omrane, Tunisie.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Sante (Montrouge, France)
Periodical, Abbrev.
Sante
Pub Date Free Form
Jan-Feb
Volume
6
Issue
1
Start Page
37
Other Pages
42
Notes
LR: 20151119; JID: 9212437; ppublish
Place of Publication
FRANCE
ISSN/ISBN
1157-5999; 1157-5999
Accession Number
PMID: 8612012
Language
fre
SubFile
English Abstract; Journal Article; IM
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
8612012
Abstract
We report a cross sectional survey to analyze the effects of medical training on the smoking habits of Tunisian medical students, and their attitudes and knowledge about smoking. Two groups of medical students were studied. One group was 257 first year students at the Medical Faculties of Tunis and Sfax, in 1987, the other 211 final year students at the same Faculties in 1994 and who had been in the first year in 1987. A questionnaire bases on that of the WHO and International Union against Lung Disease for health professionals was administered. It was completed by 95% of the students. Fifty-four % were men and 46% women, and 70.2% lived in an urban area before attending university (table 1). Nonsmokers were defined as those who had never smoked. Exsmokers were those who had formerly smoked but no longer did so. Smokers were divided into those who smoked occasionally and those who smoked daily. The prevalence of smoking was higher among the final year students than the first year students. Combined daily and occasional smoking was 24.1% among first year students and 37.1% among final year students (table 2). The rates among men for daily smoking were 19.2% in the first year and 38.9% in the final year, whereas for women the corresponding rates were 1.8% and 2% (table 3). The prevalence of occasional smoking among men was 17.8% for the first year and 17.7% in the final year. Among women, this behavior increased from 5.5% to 16.8%. Men exsmokers increased from 6.2% to 16.8% and women from 4.6% to 13.4% from the first to the final year. The proportion of first year smokers who reported a serious attempt to stop was 64.8% and that of final year students was 50%. Protected personal health was the most common reason (table 4). In the final year, 94.1% of te students agreed strongly with the view that smoking is harmful to health (table 5). However, there was substantial underestimation of the contribution of tobacco to causing serious diseases including bladder cancer, coronary artery disease, peripheral vascular disease, emphysema and neonatal morality (table 6). The study evidences insufficient awareness of medical students about their responsibility for health education and prevention. There was little interest in preventive action for patients. Only 4.5% of the final year students felt that they were equipped to advise patients about smoking. Similarly, 65.7% would not advise patients to stop smoking if they had no smoking-related symptoms and did not raise the question themselves (table 7). There were major deficiences in knowledge of preventive measures. Only 45.5% of final year students considered that they had adequate knowledge to advise patients about smoking (table 8) and 72.5% thought that they should have received more specific training about counseling (table 9). This work shows that, like in Africa, Asia and Europe, Tunisian medical students have an unsatisfactory knowledge of tobacco and its effects. There were no substantial changes in the students' knowledge of, or attitude to, smoking between the first and final year of training. Simply stimulating the interest of these future doctors in the problem of smoking is insufficient.
Descriptors
Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prevalence, Smoking/psychology/trends, Students, Medical/psychology/statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Tunisia
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Fakhfakh,R., Hsairi,M., Ben Romdhane,H., Achour,N., Ben Ammar,R., Zouari,B., Nacef,T.
Original/Translated Title
Le tabagisme des etudiants en medecine en Tunisie: tendances des comportements et des attitudes
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Shear strength of ceramic brackets bonded to etched or unetched enamel 1995 Department of Pediatric Dentistry, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, Texas 78284-7888, USA.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
The Journal of clinical pediatric dentistry
Periodical, Abbrev.
J.Clin.Pediatr.Dent.
Pub Date Free Form
Spring
Volume
19
Issue
3
Start Page
181
Other Pages
183
Notes
LR: 20151119; JID: 9100079; 0 (Composite Resins); 0 (Dental Cements); ppublish
Place of Publication
UNITED STATES
ISSN/ISBN
1053-4628; 1053-4628
Accession Number
PMID: 8611486
Language
eng
SubFile
Comparative Study; Journal Article; D
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
8611486
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare the shear bond strengths and enamel surface morphology after debonding a polycrystalline ceramic bracket (Transcend 2000) bonded with a light-cured resin cement (Transbond) without enamel etching or by etching for 15 seconds with 10% or 37% phosphoric acid and 10% maleic acid. Forty extracted noncarious human premolars were used. The buccal enamel surfaces were used and the teeth randomly divided in to four groups of 10 teeth each: Group 1: No enamel etching; Group 2: Enamel etching for 15 seconds with 10% phosphoric acid; Group 3: Enamel etching for 15 seconds with 37% phosphoric acid; and Group 4: Enamel etching for 15 seconds with 10% maleic acid. The brackets were bonded to the etched enamel surfaces according to manufacturers' instructions except the etching time variations. All specimens were stored in distilled water for 24 hours and then thermocycled for 300 cycles between 5 degrees C and 55 degrees C. The specimens were mounted in dental stone and placed in the Instron at a crosshead speed of 0.5 mm/min using a knife-edged blade. Immediately after debonding, the enamel surface and bracket-enamel interface were evaluated visually and with a stereomicroscope. Representative samples were then examined with the SEM. ANOVA and Student-Newman-Keuls tests were performed. The results (in MPa) were: Group 1:11.83 (+3.9); Group 2: 28.80 (+12.6); Group 3: 26.25 (+5.3); Group 4: 18.06 (+6.9). Groups 2 and 3 were statistically significantly different (p<0.0001) from Groups 1 and 4. Groups 2 vs. 3 or 1 vs. 4 were not statistically different. Debonding occurred mainly at the bracket-resin interface in all groups, except Group 2 which displayed two samples with enamel cohesive failures and two fracturing the bracket. The SEM evaluation revealed that after debonding, the group etched with the 37% phosphoric acid gel had the roughest enamel surface and was the only group to present enamel fractures. Bracket bonding with unetched enamel and enamel etched with 10% phosphoric acid gel should be clinically investigated using the products tested.
Descriptors
Acid Etching, Dental/methods, Analysis of Variance, Ceramics, Composite Resins, Dental Bonding, Dental Cements/chemistry, Dental Enamel/ultrastructure, Dental Stress Analysis, Humans, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Orthodontic Brackets, Stress, Mechanical, Surface Properties, Tensile Strength
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Garcia-Godoy,F., Martin,S.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Transcranial Doppler ultrasound in commercial air divers: a field study including cases with right-to-left shunting 1995 University Department of Medicine & Therapeutics, Western Infirmary, Glasgow.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Undersea & hyperbaric medicine : journal of the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc
Periodical, Abbrev.
Undersea Hyperb.Med.
Pub Date Free Form
Jun
Volume
22
Issue
2
Start Page
129
Other Pages
135
Notes
LR: 20041117; JID: 9312954; ppublish
Place of Publication
UNITED STATES
ISSN/ISBN
1066-2936; 1066-2936
Accession Number
PMID: 7633274
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; IM; S
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
7633274
Abstract
Many cases of decompression illness occur in divers using recommended decompression tables. Doppler ultrasound has been used for over 20 yr and has shown the presence of venous bubbles in asymptomatic divers working well within decompression limits. Previous studies have demonstrated an increased prevalence of patent foramen ovale in divers who have suffered neurologic decompression illness. It has been postulated that right-to-left shunting through a patent foramen ovale could allow arterialization of these bubbles, causing symptoms and signs of acute decompression illness and possibly chronic subclinical neurologic impairment. We set out to determine the incidence of bubbles in the cerebral circulation of commercial divers decompressing from air dives. Using transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD), the middle cerebral arteries of 17 divers were monitored after surfacing from depths ranging between 3 and 50 m. Peripheral contrast injection with simultaneous transthoracic echocardiography and TCD was used to screen for right-to-left shunting. Right-to-left shunting was detected in four divers by TCD (one at rest, two after a Valsalva maneuver, and one only after coughing); however, echocardiography was positive in only one of these subjects after a Valsalva maneuver (TCD was positive at rest in this subject). Seventy-three TCD recordings were performed in four settings: 41 after underwater decompression, 18 after surface decompression, 10 in the interval between surfacing and entering the decompression chamber, and 4 after a chamber dive. Twenty-three of these recordings were in four subjects with right-to-left shunting; no bubbles were detected in any of these recordings.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Descriptors
Adult, Cough/physiopathology, Decompression, Decompression Sickness/etiology/ultrasonography, Diving, Heart Septal Defects, Atrial/complications, Humans, Male, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial, Valsalva Maneuver
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Glen,S. K., Georgiadis,D., Grosset,D. G., Douglas,J. D., Lees,K. R.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Radioactivity levels in jurak and moasel, comparison with cigarette tobacco 1995 Abdul-Majid, S., Nuclear Engineering Dept., Faculty of Engineering, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah-21413, Saudi Arabia
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry
Periodical, Abbrev.
J.RADIOANAL.NUCL.CHEM.
Pub Date Free Form
1995/
Volume
194
Issue
2
Start Page
371
Other Pages
377
Notes
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
0236-5731
Accession Number
Language
SubFile
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
Abstract
Jurak and moasel are tobacco products that contain, in addition to tobacco, juice of sugar cane, fruits, spices, tar and nicotine. These products are smoked by hubble-bubble, a popular smoking habit in the Middle Eastern and North African countries. Charcoal is put directly on these products during smoking and the smoke passes through water for cooling purpose before it goes to the lung, without filtering. Radioactivity levels were measured in these products, tobacco leaves, charcoal and in cigarette tobacco of most well known brand names by gamma spectrometry system consisting of HPGe detector coupled to a PC-based 8192 channel mutlichannel analyzer. The average 226Ra concentrations in jurak, moasel, tobacco leaves, charcoal and cigarette tobacco in Bq/kg were: 3.4, 1.8, 3.2, 2.9 and 7 respectively; that of 232Th were: 3.8, 2.6, 3.5, 2.2 and 7.8 respectively; that of 40K were 620, 445, 511, 163 and 876 respectively. It is expected that a jurak smoker inhales 10 times the radioactivity and a moasal smoker twice that compared to a 25 cigarette/d smoker.
Descriptors
charcoal, potassium 40, radium 226, thorium 232, Africa, smoking, conference paper, radioactive contamination, radioactivity, spectrometry, tobacco
Links
Book Title
Database
Embase
Publisher
Data Source
Embase
Authors
Abdul-Majid,S., Kutbi,I. I., Basabrain,M.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Hemodialysis in Ibadan: a preliminary report on the first 100 dialysis. 1995 Arije, A., Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Nigeria.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
African Journal of Medicine and Medical Sciences
Periodical, Abbrev.
Afr.J.Med.Med.Sci.
Pub Date Free Form
/
Volume
24
Issue
3
Start Page
255
Other Pages
259
Notes
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
0309-3913
Accession Number
Language
SubFile
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
Abstract
The experience with the first 100 hemodialysis sessions at the Owena Dialysis Centre of the University College Hospital, Ibadan (UCH) is hereby presented. A total of 9 patients were dialysed during a 7-month period. The femoral vein was the most often utilised vascular access route (53 episodes in 5 patients) while a forearm fistula was functional in only one patient. The dialyzer and blood lines were reused for each patient for a maximum of 5 times. Technical problems encountered were: power failure (12 episodes), ruptured dialyzer (3), water-pipe leakage (4) machine breakdown (2) and heparin pump failure (2). Clinical problems were: failure of fistula access (2), thrombosed femoral veins (2), clotted cannula (3), low arterial pressure (20); nausea and vomiting (2), pruritus (46), muscle cramps (5), Sepsis (8) and hypotension (2). Six patients discontinued treatment after less than 10 dialyses due to financial constraints. The high cost of hemodialysis remains the major setback to its use in the treatment of end-stage renal disease in developing countries; there is the need for acceptable improvisation to reduce the overhead cost so as to make it available to most patients requiring dialysis.
Descriptors
adolescent, adult, cost control, economics, devices, female, hemodialysis, hospital, human, male, methodology, middle aged, Nigeria, organization and management, patient, recycling, renal replacement therapy, review
Links
Book Title
Database
MEDLINE
Publisher
Data Source
Embase
Authors
Arije,A., Kadiri,S., Akinkugbe,O. O., Osobamiro,O.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
The use of individual tree statistics to quantify effects in an &#39;acid mist&#39; experiment with mature trees 1995 Cape, J.N., Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Penicuik, Midlothian EH26 0QB, United Kingdom
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Water, air, and soil pollution
Periodical, Abbrev.
Water Air Soil Pollut.
Pub Date Free Form
/
Volume
85
Issue
3
Start Page
1367
Other Pages
1372
Notes
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
0049-6979
Accession Number
Language
SubFile
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
Abstract
Mature trees of a single clone of Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carr.) growing in the field were exposed to simulated acid mist at pH 2.5 over three successive years. The growth of each tree in the acid mist treatment, in terms of the stem area increment, was related to the pattern of growth of the untreated trees at the site during 1991 and 1992. In 1993, the effects of stopping the acid mist treatment on half of the treated trees was investigated by comparing the actual growth against that predicted relative to the untreated trees on the basis of the previous years' data. The prediction of growth from one year to the next was consistently too small for the smallest acid-misted trees, suggesting that the growth rates relative to the untreated trees were increasing with time. Relative to the trees which continued to receive acid mist, however, the smaller trees which received no further acid mist in 1993 grew les than predicted, but there was a significantly greater growth than predicted for the largest 'recovering' trees. Results from the individual tree modelling approach showed that a 10% change in relative stem area increment would be detectable at the 5% level, using a block of 4 trees as a treatment unit. The statistical techniques used are alternatives to conventional ANOVA calculations in determining statistically significant treatment effects where numbers of replicates are small.
Descriptors
acid rain, acidification, conference paper, nonhuman, plant growth, simulation, tree
Links
Book Title
Database
Embase
Publisher
Data Source
Embase
Authors
Cape,J. N., Smith,R. I., Crossley,A., Harvey,F. J., Sheppard,L. J.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Effects of acid mist on needles from mature sitka spruce grafts. Part II. Influence of developmental stage, age and needle morphology on visible damage 1995 Leith, I.D., Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Edinburgh Research Station, Bush Estate, Penicuik, Midlothian EH26 0QB, United Kingdom
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Environmental Pollution
Periodical, Abbrev.
Environ.Pollut.
Pub Date Free Form
1995/
Volume
90
Issue
3
Start Page
363
Other Pages
370
Notes
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
0269-7491
Accession Number
Language
SubFile
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
Abstract
Mature grafts of five Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carr.) clones were exposed to simulated acid mist comprising an equimolar mixture of H2SO4 and NH4NO3 (16 and 0.01 mol m-3) at pH 2.5 and 5.0. Mist was applied to potted plants growing in open-top chambers on consecutive days, four times a week, at a precipitation equivalent of 1 mm per day. The total exposure to polluted mist was equivalent to three times that measured at an upland forest in SE Scotland. The aim of the experiment was to characterize the response of juvenile foliage produced by physiologically mature grafts (on seedling root stock) and compare it with the behaviour of juvenile foliage on seedlings. Development of visible foliar damage was followed through the growing season. Measurements of needle length, diameter, weight, surface area, surface wax weight and wettability were made on current year needles to determine whether particular foliar characteristics increased susceptibility to injury. Significant amounts (> 10%) of visible needle damage was observed on only one of the five clones. Damage was most severe on the clone with the most horizontal branch and needle habit, but over the five clones there was no relationship between angle of branch display and damage. Likewise no combination of needle characteristics (length, width, area, amount of wax) was indicative of potential susceptibility. A comparison with previous acid misting experiments using seedlings suggests that juvenile foliage on physiologically mature trees is equally susceptible to visible injury as juvenile seedling foliage. Date of budburst differed among clones, and in this experiment exerted the over-riding influence on development of injury symptoms. Foliage exposed to a combination of strong acidity and high sulphate concentrations over the few weeks immediately following budburst suffered most visible injury. The absence of significant amounts of visible damage in UK forests probably reflects the general low susceptibility to visible injury of Sitka spruce exposed to acid mist.
Descriptors
ammonium nitrate, sulfate, sulfuric acid, acid rain, article, comparative study, controlled study, forest, morphology, nonhuman, pH, plant growth, plant leaf, precipitation, simulation, tree, United Kingdom
Links
Book Title
Database
Embase
Publisher
Data Source
Embase
Authors
Leith,I. D., Sheppard,L. J., Cape,J. N.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors