Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 1880 in total

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  1. Loncin H
    Med J Malaya, 1965 Jun;19(4):321-3.
    PMID: 4220862
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure*
  2. Loncin H, Gurian JM, Loncin ME
    J Atheroscler Res, 1968 5 1;8(3):471-82.
    PMID: 5660508
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure
  3. Yonge CM
    Biol. Bull., 1968 Oct;135(2):378-405.
    PMID: 28368764 DOI: 10.2307/1539789
    1. Study of the structure and mode of life of Malleus regula provides the basis for consideration of the "hammer" species, M. malleus and M. albus.
    2. M. regula occurs byssally attached, vertically disposed on rocky substrates associated with mud and is widely distributed in the tropical Indo-Pacific.
    3. The distal two-thirds of the elongated shell is exclusively prismatic. By means of special pallial retractors the mantle lobes can be withdrawn within the nacreous region.
    4. The massive opisthodetic ligament has a short secondary extension of fusion layer.
    5. A promyal chamber on the right side proximal to the adductor increases water flow into the exhalant chamber.
    6. The long filibranch ctenidia provide a vertically extended food-collecting surface.
    7. The foot is concerned with planting of the massive byssus which emerges through a notch in the right valve but on the under ( i.e., dorsal) surface. There is also a unique and very long accessory foot, ventrally grooved, everywhere ciliated and in constant writhing activity due to blood pressure and intrinsic muscle. Moving freely throughout the lower mantle cavity it can only be concerned with cleansing.
    8. Pseudofaeces are ejected from the distal tip of the mantle cavity.
    9. M. malleus, the black hammer shell, occurs vertically embedded in coarse sand or sandy gravel. Byssus threads are attached to fragments within the substrate. The great anterior and posterior elongations of the hinge line (also exclusively prismatic) are separated by the byssal notch (now affecting both valves).
    10. Shells are usually excessively irregular due to the great exposure to damage and the almost unlimited powers of rapid repair by the three pallial extensions.
    11. M. albus, the white hammer shell, is stouter and inhabits muddy sand. During growth it loses the byssus with reduction of the foot and byssal retractors and closure of the byssal notch. The accessory foot is not affected. The animal becomes anchored in the substrate exclusively by the anterior and posterior extensions of the shell.
    12. Description of the typically rounded Isognomon ephippium leads to that of the elongated I. isognomon which occupies precisely the same habitat as M. regula.
    13. It lacks the pallial retractors, promyal chamber and accessory foot of Malleus, the nacreous region is more extended distally and the ligament is multivincular (the formation of which is discussed), producing some posterior, but never any anterior, extension of the hinge line.
    14. A remarkably dense mixed bed of M. regula and I. isognomon in Darvel Bay, Sabah (Borneo), is described. Different spawning periods, by preventing competition during settlement, may account for this complete intermixing of sympatric species, which, however, are generalized herbivores where numbers are not limited by food supply.
    15. From a basic epifaunal habit (Pteria, Isognomon, M. regula), members of the Pteriacea have become adapted for infaunal life within sponges (Vulsella, Crenatula) or within soft substrates ( M. malleus, M. alba and the Pinnidae).
    16. There is final discussion about elongation in monomyarians, i.e., in the genus Malleus and in I. isognomon.
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure; Blood Pressure Determination
  4. Levey HA
    Toxicon, 1969 May;6(4):269-76.
    PMID: 5805121
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure/drug effects
  5. Mathewson I, Hardy EA
    Anaesthesia, 1970 Apr;25(2):265-71.
    PMID: 4909432
    Matched MeSH terms: Positive-Pressure Respiration
  6. Alhady SM, Law GT
    Med J Aust, 1970 May 09;1(19):941-3.
    PMID: 5422565
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure
  7. Burns-Cox CJ
    Am Heart J, 1970 Nov;80(5):718-9.
    PMID: 5474109
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure*
  8. Khawaja AA
    Med J Malaya, 1971 Mar;25(3):229-33.
    PMID: 4253255
    Matched MeSH terms: Positive-Pressure Respiration
  9. Hannah HB
    Br J Anaesth, 1971 Oct;43(10):991-3.
    PMID: 5115036
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure
  10. Burns-Cox CJ, Chong YH, Gillman R
    Br Heart J, 1972 Sep;34(9):953-8.
    PMID: 4116420
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure
  11. Damodaran A, Nair S, Somasundram R
    Med J Malaysia, 1973 Dec;28(2):99-102.
    PMID: 4276265
    Matched MeSH terms: Positive-Pressure Respiration
  12. Chan WF, Sinnathuray TA, Rahman MG
    Int Surg, 1973 Nov-Dec;58(11):784-6.
    PMID: 4796092
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure
  13. Kuah KB
    Med J Malaysia, 1974 Mar;28(3):187-90.
    PMID: 4278020
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure/drug effects
  14. Ken DK, Ng KH
    Med J Malaysia, 1974 Mar;28(3):191-3.
    PMID: 4278259
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Pressure/drug effects
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