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Alex D Wright

Showing results (1-10 of 10) with videos related to

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Clinical Medicine (London, England)|January 19, 2007
Medicine at high altitudeAlex D Wright,
Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications|October 31, 2006
Hypoglycemia in Type 2 diabetic patients randomized to and maintained on monotherapy with diet, sulfonylurea, metformin, or insulin for 6 years from diagnosis: UKPDS73Alex D Wright, Carole A Cull, Kenneth M Macleod, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|June 25, 2005
The sharpened Romberg test for assessing ataxia in mild acute mountain sicknessBrian G Johnson, Alex D Wright, Margaret F Beazley, et al.
European Journal of Clinical Investigation|June 22, 2010
Do changes in gastro-intestinal blood flow explain high-altitude anorexia?Nicholas S Kalson, Faye Hext, Andrew J Davies, et al.
High Altitude Medicine & Biology|February 25, 2014
Time course variations in the mechanisms by which cerebral oxygen delivery is maintained on exposure to hypoxia/altitudeChristopher Imray, Colin Chan, Alison Stubbings, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|August 22, 2008
Intrapulmonary and intracardiac shunting with exercise at altitudeChris H E Imray, Kyle T S Pattinson, Steve Myers, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|December 3, 2014
High-intensity intermittent exercise increases pulmonary interstitial edema at altitude but not at simulated altitudeMark E Edsell, Yashvi H Wimalasena, William L Malein, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|March 26, 2004
Medroxyprogesterone at high altitude. The effects on blood gases, cerebral regional oxygenation, and acute mountain sicknessAlex D Wright, Margaret F Beazley, Arthur R Bradwell, et al.
BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine|February 2, 2018
Acetazolamide reduces exercise capacity following a 5-day ascent to 4559 m in a randomised studyArthur R Bradwell, Kimberley Ashdown, Carla Rue, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|June 17, 2014
Exercise limitation of acetazolamide at altitude (3459 m)Arthur R Bradwell, Stephen D Myers, Maggie Beazley, et al.
Pageof 1

Showing results (1-10 of 10) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 1
Clinical Medicine (London, England)|January 19, 2007
Medicine at high altitudeAlex D Wright,
Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications|October 31, 2006
Hypoglycemia in Type 2 diabetic patients randomized to and maintained on monotherapy with diet, sulfonylurea, metformin, or insulin for 6 years from diagnosis: UKPDS73Alex D Wright, Carole A Cull, Kenneth M Macleod, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|June 25, 2005
The sharpened Romberg test for assessing ataxia in mild acute mountain sicknessBrian G Johnson, Alex D Wright, Margaret F Beazley, et al.
European Journal of Clinical Investigation|June 22, 2010
Do changes in gastro-intestinal blood flow explain high-altitude anorexia?Nicholas S Kalson, Faye Hext, Andrew J Davies, et al.
High Altitude Medicine & Biology|February 25, 2014
Time course variations in the mechanisms by which cerebral oxygen delivery is maintained on exposure to hypoxia/altitudeChristopher Imray, Colin Chan, Alison Stubbings, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|August 22, 2008
Intrapulmonary and intracardiac shunting with exercise at altitudeChris H E Imray, Kyle T S Pattinson, Steve Myers, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|December 3, 2014
High-intensity intermittent exercise increases pulmonary interstitial edema at altitude but not at simulated altitudeMark E Edsell, Yashvi H Wimalasena, William L Malein, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|March 26, 2004
Medroxyprogesterone at high altitude. The effects on blood gases, cerebral regional oxygenation, and acute mountain sicknessAlex D Wright, Margaret F Beazley, Arthur R Bradwell, et al.
BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine|February 2, 2018
Acetazolamide reduces exercise capacity following a 5-day ascent to 4559 m in a randomised studyArthur R Bradwell, Kimberley Ashdown, Carla Rue, et al.
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine|June 17, 2014
Exercise limitation of acetazolamide at altitude (3459 m)Arthur R Bradwell, Stephen D Myers, Maggie Beazley, et al.
Pageof 1