387 research outputs found

    Michèle Grosjean, Jean-Paul Thibaud (dir.), L'espace urbain en méthodes, 2001

    No full text
    Boddaert Corinne. Michèle Grosjean, Jean-Paul Thibaud (dir.), L'espace urbain en méthodes, 2001. In: Les Annales de la recherche urbaine, N°93, 2003. Les infortunes de l’espace. pp. 181-182

    Espace et temps, seuil et proximité : Pour une approche urbaine de la ville

    No full text
    Boddaert Corinne, Harfouche Laabid. Espace et temps, seuil et proximité : Pour une approche urbaine de la ville. In: Les Annales de la recherche urbaine, N°90, 2001. Les seuils du proche. pp. 126-129

    Une série trimestrielle des Tableaux d'opérations financières conjoncturels (1970-1977)

    No full text
    Boddaert Lucienne, Collignon François, Goldet Hélène. Une série trimestrielle des Tableaux d'opérations financières conjoncturels (1970-1977). In: Statistiques et études financières, n°37, 1979. pp. 43-75

    Equus onager Boddaert 1785

    No full text
    Equus onager Boddaert, 1785. Elench. Anim., p. 160. TYPE LOCALITY: NW Persia (= Iran), Kasbin, near Caspian. DISTRIBUTION: Formerly Kazakhstan north to upper Irtysh and Ural Rs. (Russia); westward north of the Caucasus and Black Sea at least to Dniestr River (Ukraine); and SE of Caspian Sea, Anatolia, N Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan to Thar Desert of NW India; survives as isolated populations in Rann of Kutch (India), Badkhys Preserve, Turkmenia, and C Iran; also reestablished on Barsa-khelmes Isl (Aral Sea, Uzbekistan). STATUS: CITES - Appendix I E. hemionus khur; IUCN - Endangered as E. h. khur, Extinct as £. h. hemippus. SYNONYMS: bahram, blanfordi, dzigguetai, hamar, hemippus, indicus, khur, kulan, syriacus. COMMENTS: Revised by Groves and Mazak (1967), who with Groves (1986) and Schlawe (1986) included onager in hemionus, but Bennett (1980) considered onager a distinct species.Published as part of Peter Grubb, 1993, Order Perissodactyla, pp. 369-372 in Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London :Smithsonian Institution Press on page 370, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735311

    Equus onager Boddaert 1785

    No full text
    Equus onager Boddaert, 1785. Elench. Anim., p. 60. TYPE LOCALITY: N.W. Persia (= Iran), Kasbin, near Caspian. DISTRIBUTION: Formerly much of Central Asian republics (U.S. S.R.) north to upper Irtysh and Ural Rivers; westward north of the Caucasus and Black Sea at least to Dniestr River; and S.E. of Caspian Sea, Anatolia, N. Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan to Thar Desert of N.W. India; survives as isolated populations in Rann of Kutch (India), Badkhys Preserve, Turkmenia (U.S. S.R.); and central Iran; also reestablished on Barsa-khelmes Isl. (Aral Sea) (U.S. S. R.). COMMENT: Includes hemippus, khur, and kulan (DKB); most previous workers regarded onager as a synonym of hemionus, but Bennett, 1980, Syst. Zool., 29:272-287, considered it a distinct species; see comments under hemionus. PROTECTED STATUS: CITES - Appendix I as E. hemionus khur subspecies only.Published as part of James H. Honacki, Kenneth E. Kinman & James W. Koeppl, 1982, Order Perissodactyla, pp. 308-311 in Mammal Species of the World (1 st Edition), Lawrence, Kansas, USA :Alien Press, Inc. & The Association of Systematics Collections on page 309, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735301

    FIGURES 1–3. Morishitium urocissae n in Key to the species of Morishitium Wienberg, 1928 (Cyclocoelidae), with the description of a new species from the red-billed blue magpie, Urocissa erythrorhyncha (Boddaert) (Corvidae) from Guizhou Province, People's Republic of China

    No full text
    FIGURES 1–3. Morishitium urocissae n. sp. from the red-billed blue magpie, Urocissa erythrorhyncha. 1. Ventral view of fully mature adult. 2. Composite drawing of cirrus sac and seminal vesicle showing and cirrus and location of the genital pore, ventral view. 3. Composite drawing of female genital complex, ventral view.Published as part of Dronen, Norman O., 2014, Key to the species of Morishitium Wienberg, 1928 (Cyclocoelidae), with the description of a new species from the red-billed blue magpie, Urocissa erythrorhyncha (Boddaert) (Corvidae) from Guizhou Province, People's Republic of China, pp. 273-282 in Zootaxa 3835 (2) on page 279, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.7, http://zenodo.org/record/23048

    Evolution of acute myocarditis in a pediatric population: An MRI based study

    No full text
    Background: Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) data regarding myocarditis presentation and disease course is still lacking in pediatric patients. We evaluate baseline CMR and evolution of functional and tissue abnormalities in children with acute myocarditis. Methods: CMR was performed in 125 patients with clinical diagnosis of acute myocarditis. Clinical follow-up was performed for a median of 498 (214–923) days. Results: LVEF was depressed (<55%) in 56 cases (45%) upon baseline CMR. LGE was found in 93 patients (77%) of cases. LGE was exclusively subepicardial in 29 patients (23%), while other LGE patterns (midwall/mixed) were present in 64 (51%). CMR was repeated in 92 (74%) patients. 67% presented recover of function at a median of 170 (70–746) days after onset of symptoms. Midwall/mixed LGE pattern had a statistically significant correlation with absent recover of function (OR 0.20 p 0.036). Thirteen patients (16%) had recovery from LV dysfunction but with persistence of LGE. Sub-epicardial pattern of LGE (OR 3.33, 95% CI 1.08–10.2, p = 0.036) and the presence of fever at admission (OR 4.67, 95% CI 1.16–18.7, p = 0.03) were associated with a significantly higher likelihood of complete normalization while midwall/mixed LGE pattern was associated with non-recovery. Conclusions: In pediatric myocarditis, midwall/mixed LGE pattern is associated with absent recover of function. Patients with recover of function may still have persistence of LGE, while a complete recovery from functional and tissue abnormalities is found only in a third of patients. Midwall/mixed pattern of LGE at first MRI was associated to worse outcome
    corecore