Search

Your search keyword '"Maureen Fallon"' showing total 42 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Maureen Fallon" Remove constraint Author: "Maureen Fallon" Database OpenAIRE Remove constraint Database: OpenAIRE
42 results on '"Maureen Fallon"'

Search Results

1. A cross-sector systematic review and synthesis of knowledge on telemedicine interventions in chronic wound management—Implications from a system perspective

2. Systematic review of the use of Statistical Process Control methods to measure the success of pressure ulcer prevention

3. Morphologic Changes in the Peritoneal Membrane of Patients with Renal Disease

4. Revisiting Supervised Agricultural Experience

5. Additional pharmacological evidence that endogenous ATP modulates cochlear mechanics

6. Conditioning the auditory system with continuous vs. interrupted noise of equal acoustic energy: Is either exposure more protective?

7. Pharmacological evidence that endogenous ATP modulates cochlear mechanics

8. Stress and quality of life in the renal transplant patient: a preliminary investigation

9. Time-varying alterations in the f2–f1 DPOAE response to continuous primary stimulation II. Influence of local calcium-dependent mechanisms

10. Caffeine-induced shortening of isolated outer hair cells: An osmotic mechanism of action

11. Time-varying alterations in the f2−f1 DPOAE response to continuous primary stimulation I: Response characterization and contribution of the olivocochlear efferents

12. ATP antagonists cibacron blue, basilen blue and suramin alter sound-evoked responses of the cochlea and auditory nerve

13. Effects of Adenosine 5′-triphosphate and related agonists on cochlear function

14. Volume regulation in cochlear outer hair cells

15. Intracochlear salicylate reduces low-intensity acoustic and cochlear microphonic distortion products

16. Intense sound increases the level of an unidentified amine found in perilymph

17. Lowering extracellular calcium decreases the length of isolated outer hair cells

18. Nimodipine, an L-channel Ca2+ antagonist, reverses the negative summating potential recorded from the guinea pig cochlea

19. The Hakomi Method and Body-Centered Psychotherapies

20. Psychosocial recovery from adult kidney transplantation: a literature review

21. Phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotides can selectively alter neuronal activity in the cochlea

22. Quality of life after renal transplantation

23. Cytotoxicity and mitogenicity of adenosine triphosphate in the cochlea

24. Nitrosoglutathione suppresses cochlear potentials and DPOAEs but not outer hair cell currents or voltage-dependent capacitance

25. Chronic low-level noise exposure alters distortion product otoacoustic emissions

26. Nitroprusside suppresses cochlear potentials and outer hair cell responses

27. A nicotinic-like receptor mediates suppression of distortion product otoacoustic emissions by contralateral sound

28. Contralateral sound suppresses distortion product otoacoustic emissions through cholinergic mechanisms

29. Intracochlear application of acetylcholine alters sound-induced mechanical events within the cochlear partition

30. Magnitude of the negative summating potential varies with perilymph calcium levels

31. Changing cation levels (Mg2+, Ca2+, Na+) alters the release of glutamate, GABA and other substances from the guinea pig cochlea

32. Guinea pigs show post-natal stability in frequency mapping at the basal turn

33. Potassium induced release of GABA and other substances from the guinea pig cochlea

34. Salicylate, mefenamate, meclofenamate, and quinine on cochlear potentials

35. A suppressive ‘‘off‐effect’’ in the f2−f1 DPOAE response to continuous, moderate‐level primary stimulation

36. Focus on clinical research

37. Suppression of auditory nerve activity in the guinea pig cochlea by1-(p-bromobenzoyl)-piperazine-2,3-dicar☐ylic acid

38. Comparative actions of salicylate on the amphibian lateral line and guinea pig cochlea

39. The quinoxalinediones DNQX, CNQX and two related congeners suppress hair cell-to-auditory nerve transmission

40. The active process is affected first by intense sound exposure

41. An ipsilateral cochlear efferent loop protects the cochlea during intense sound exposure

42. 2-Amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid receptors are not involved in synaptic transmission from hair cells to auditory neurons

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources