Gelenkverletzung : Kinematic MRI of the joints : functional anatomy, kinesiology, and clinical applications / edited by Frank G. Shellock and Christopher M. Powers
2001
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Geleren. : The chemistry of photography : from classical to digital technologies / David Rogers
A water-soluble, enzyme co-factor present in minute amounts in every living cell. It occurs mainly bound to proteins or polypeptides and is abundant in liver, kidney, pancreas, yeast, and milk
1
Gelfond, Michael. : Logic programming, knowledge representation, and nonmonotonic reasoning : essays dedicated to Michael Gelfond on the occasion of his 65th birthday / Marcello Balduccini, Tran Cao Son (eds.)
Geliebte Motiv : Laura : uncovering gender and genre in Wyatt, Donne, and Marvell / Barbara L. Estrin
1994
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Gélification. : Hydrocolloids. Part 1, Physical chemistry and industrial application of gels, polysaccharides and proteins / edited by Katsuyoshi Nishinari
Gelijke beloning. : Unequal pay for women and men : evidence from the British birth cohort studies / Heather Joshi and Pierella Paci, with Gerald Makepeace and Jane Waldfogel
A condition characterized by recurrent episodes of daytime somnolence and lapses in consciousness (microsomnias) that may be associated with automatic behaviors and AMNESIA. CATAPLEXY; SLEEP PARALYSIS, and hypnagogic HALLUCINATIONS frequently accompany narcolepsy. The pathophysiology of this disorder includes sleep-onset rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which normally follows stage III or IV sleep. (From Neurology 1998 Feb;50(2 Suppl 1):S2-S7)
A condition characterized by recurrent episodes of daytime somnolence and lapses in consciousness (microsomnias) that may be associated with automatic behaviors and AMNESIA. CATAPLEXY; SLEEP PARALYSIS, and hypnagogic HALLUCINATIONS frequently accompany narcolepsy. The pathophysiology of this disorder includes sleep-onset rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which normally follows stage III or IV sleep. (From Neurology 1998 Feb;50(2 Suppl 1):S2-S7)
A condition characterized by recurrent episodes of daytime somnolence and lapses in consciousness (microsomnias) that may be associated with automatic behaviors and AMNESIA. CATAPLEXY; SLEEP PARALYSIS, and hypnagogic HALLUCINATIONS frequently accompany narcolepsy. The pathophysiology of this disorder includes sleep-onset rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which normally follows stage III or IV sleep. (From Neurology 1998 Feb;50(2 Suppl 1):S2-S7)