115,621 research outputs found
Donald G. Kyle, Athletics in Ancient Athens
Raepsaet Georges. Donald G. Kyle, Athletics in Ancient Athens. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 59, 1990. p. 490
Donald G. Kyle, Athletics in Ancient Athens
Raepsaet Georges. Donald G. Kyle, Athletics in Ancient Athens. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 59, 1990. p. 490
1. G. Kyle 2. Robert Ford
1. G. Kyle, Howard Unvierstity, Washington, D.C. record holder discus throw and 120 yards high hurdle, open events. A leader in competitive college events. 2. Robert Ford, John M. Langston School, Washington, D.C. winner elementary school 50 yards dash.https://dh.howard.edu/ebhend_bsp/1138/thumbnail.jp
Kyle Bellon
Kyle G. Bellon, son of LaVera Bellon, completed his individual combat training at the Marine Corps Base
Living and working longer with cancer
George Osborne has announced an increase in the state pension age to 66 for both men and women by 2020 (HM Treasury, 2010). It seems we will all be living longer with work in the future, and so too with cancer. Improvements in screening, earlier intervention and more effective treatments mean that cancer survival rates are increasing, particularly for common cancers. In a comparative study of breast cancer survival across 30 European countries, only Iceland saw an overall decline in mortality between 1989 and 2006 (45%) greater than in England and Wales (35%) (Autier et al, 2010). Scotland ranked fourth (30%) and Northern Ireland fifth (29%).Output Type: Editoria
Imaging the Respiratory Effects of Opioids in the Human Brain
Opioid analgesia is limited by the potentially fatal side effect of respiratory depression. In humans the brain mechanisms of opioid-induced respiratory depression are poorly understood. Investigating pharmacological influences upon breathing helps us to understand better the brain's respiratory control networks. Blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) maps neuronal activity in the brain, and is therefore a potentially useful, noninvasive technique to investigate the functional neuroanatomy of respiratory control in humans. Contrast in FMRI is derived from the vascular response to brain activity (neurovascular coupling). Therefore, FMRI studies of the neuronal effects of opioids are rendered more complex by the nonneuronal effects of opioids including those on systemic physiology, cerebral blood flow, and direct effects on the cerebral vasculature such as altered vascular reactivity. Here we review our series of studies that dissect the vascular and neuronal breathing-related effects of opioids in the brain. These methodological considerations have enabled successful FMRI studies revealing the brain networks responsible for opioid effects upon respiratory awareness. Similar considerations would be necessary for FMRI studies in hypoxia or in disease states that affect the physiological state of the brain
Kyle (Richard G.) From Sect to Denomination. Church Types and their Implications for Mennonite Brethren History
Séguy Jean. Kyle (Richard G.) From Sect to Denomination. Church Types and their Implications for Mennonite Brethren History. In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions, n°65/2, 1988. p. 285
Kyle (Richard G.) From Sect to Denomination. Church Types and their Implications for Mennonite Brethren History
Séguy Jean. Kyle (Richard G.) From Sect to Denomination. Church Types and their Implications for Mennonite Brethren History. In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions, n°65/2, 1988. p. 285
- …
