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- BookEric Swanson.Summary: Insisting on an evidence-based approach, Dr. Swanson brings the light of science to bear on the many controversies in cosmetic breast surgery today. Conventional wisdom is challenged with factual analysis, made possible by Dr. Swansonℓ́ℓs large body of published research. In his hallmark detailed style, the author lays the foundation with clinical studies, measurements, and patient-reported outcomes. The work is all here in one place for the first time, leading to some surprising conclusions. For plastic surgeons who prefer data to dogma, Evidence-Based Cosmetic Breast Surgery provides a unique and invaluable resource.
- BookCalifornia Department of Corrections.Contents:
I. General administration
II. Financial operations
III. Personnel, training, and employee relations
IV. Management information systems
V. Custody/security operations
VI. Classification
VII. Case records information
VIII. Parole operationsPrint [1989- - ArticleIppoliti AF, Sturdevant RA, Isenberg JI, Binder M, Camacho R, Cano R, Cooney C, Kline MM, Koretz RL, Meyer JH, Samloff IM, Schwabe AD, Strom EA, Valenzuela JE, Wintroub RH.Gastroenterology. 1978 Feb;74(2 Pt 2):393-5.In a randomized double blind multicenter trial, patients treated with cimetidine (800 or 1200 mg daily) or an intensive regimen of Al-Mg antacid (210 ml daily) had similar rates of duodenal ulcer healing and pain relief. After 4 weeks of treatment, the proportion of patients with ulcer healing by endoscopy were: cimetidine (1200 mg), 21 of 33 (64 percent); cimetidine (800 mg), 19 of 32 (59 percent); and antacids, 15 of 29 (52 percent). These proportions did not differ significantly. Eighty per cent of cimetidine-treated patients became asymptomatic by week 4, as did 63 percent of antacid-treated patients (P greater than 0.1). No untoward effects were observed during cimetidine treatment. Twenty-seven per cent of antacid-treated patients reported diarrhea.