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Retention gross

Upper and lower urinary tract infection, urosepsis, urinary incontinence refractory urinary retentions chronic, renal failure, bladder diverticuli, bladder stones, or recurrent gross hematuria. [Pg.793]

TF Hatch, P Gross. Physical factors in respiratory deposition of aerosols. In Pulmonary Deposition and Retention of Inhaled Aerosols. New York Academic Press, 1964, pp. 27 43. [Pg.500]

Hatch, T.F. and Gross, P. (1964). Pulmonary Deposition and Retention of Inhaled Aerosols. Academic Press, New York, pp. 16-17, 51-52, 147-168. [Pg.360]

Although reduction or abolition of the gross muscarinic stimulation, with retention or enhancement of adrenergic neurone blocking activity, was achieved by suitable modification of the xylocholine molecule, no drug of proven clinical... [Pg.151]

Fig. 7. Gross retention times, t, (ordinate on the right side) and logarithm of the capacity factors, k = (tg — t(j)/tg, as a function of the number, n, of atoms in the S molecules (death time t 1.3 min, column Nucleosil C-18, eluent metha-nol/cyclohexane 80/20)... Fig. 7. Gross retention times, t, (ordinate on the right side) and logarithm of the capacity factors, k = (tg — t(j)/tg, as a function of the number, n, of atoms in the S molecules (death time t 1.3 min, column Nucleosil C-18, eluent metha-nol/cyclohexane 80/20)...
Apart from the lubricant area fraction, the actual dimensions of the recesses are also important. Deep, narrow pockets are inherently likely to give strong support and retention of the lubricant material, but, as shown previously, deep pockets are wasteful of lubricant, while narrow pockets are susceptible to blocking with wear debris. On the other hand, wide shallow pockets are likely to provide poorer support and retention for the lubricant material. Wide recesses will also lead to a gross lack of uniformity in the surface strength of the bearing surface because the lubricant composite and the metal matrix are likely to have very different moduli. [Pg.124]

Two different components are separated in a chromatographic column only if they spend different times in or at the stationary phase, respectively. The time in which the components do not travel along the column, is called the solute retention time, f5. The column dead time, tm, is defined as the time necessary for a non-retained component to pass through the column. The gross retention time, solute retention time and the column dead time ... [Pg.12]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.15 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.13 ]




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