スポンサーリンク
Third Department of Internal Medicine, University of the Ryukyus School of Medicine | 論文
- Alterations of α_1-Adrenergic Receptor Densities in Right and Left Ventricles of Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats
- Divergent Effects of Beta-Blocker Therapy on Self-Estimated and Objectively Scored Activities of Daily Living
- P692 FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO THE PROGRESSION RATE OF CORONARY ARTERY STENOSIS
- 0322 SMOKING IMPAIRS ADL (ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING)
- Current Status of Antihypertensive Therapy for Elderly Patients in Japan
- Increase in Pulse Pressure Relates to Diabetes Mellitus and Low HDL Cholesterol, but Not to Hyperlipidemia in Hypertensive Patients Aged 50 Years or Older
- Office Blood Pressure Variability as a Predictor of Brain Infarction in Elderly Hypertensive Patients
- Control of Blood Pressure and Lifestyle-Related Risk Factors in Elderly Japanese Hypertensive Subjects
- Low Serum Cholesterol as a Risk Factor for Hemorrhagic Stroke in Men : A Community-Based Mass Screening in Okinawa, Japan
- Relationship Between Serum Cholesterol and the Risk of Acute Myocardial Infarction in a Screened Cohort in Okinawa, Japan
- Predictive Value of Serial Platelet Count and VEGF Determination for the Management of DIC in the Crow-Fukase (POEMS) Syndrome
- Cardiovascular and Sympathetic Effects of _L-Glutamate and Glycine Injected into the Rostral Ventrolateral Medulla of Conscious Rats
- Ouabain-Like Immunoreactivity in the Medulla Oblongata of Rats
- Sudden Death in the General Population in Okinawa : Incidence and Causes of Death
- Neural Effects of Natural Behavior on Renal Blood Flow in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats
- Effects of Air-Jet Stress on Renal Blood Flow in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats
- Blood Pressure and Sympathetic Nervous Function in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats Derived from Breeders on Low Sodium Diet : THE 15th CONFERENCE ON THE PATHOGENESIS OF HYPERTENSION
- Predictive Value of Serial Platelet Count and VEGF Determination for the Management of DIC in the Crow-Fukase (POEMS) Syndrome