Boxcar Shortage

Boxcar Shortage

Author: United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce

Publisher:

Published: 1947

Total Pages: 116

ISBN-13:

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Considers legislation to provide for more effective regulation of railroad freight car service; to enact tax credits to assist in building of new freight-carrying equipment; and to establish a Bureau of Service in the ICC to administer freight car matters.


Studies on Periodontal Disease

Studies on Periodontal Disease

Author: Daisuke Ekuni

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2014-01-09

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 1461495571

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The chapters of Studies on Periodontal Disease comprise four parts. Part 1 provides basic sciences from the general to the particular. The findings of cell culture and animal models supply the mechanism between periodontal disease and oxidative stress. In part 2, human clinical studies are mainly addressed. The effects of periodontal therapy on circulating oxidative stress are also discussed. The relationships between periodontal disease and systemic diseases are examined in part 3. The involvement of oxidative stress and inflammation are discussed through in vivo and in vitro study results. Part 4 discusses future strategies, including the effects of antioxidants and nutrition on periodontal disease. This thorough examination of the relationship between oxidative stress and periodontal disease is essential reading for researchers in oxidative stress and periodontal clinicians, alike.


Avoid Food-Drug Interactions

Avoid Food-Drug Interactions

Author: U.s. Food and Drug Administration

Publisher: Createspace Independent Pub

Published: 2014-07-05

Total Pages: 34

ISBN-13: 9781500422288

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What you eat and drink can affect the way your medicines work. Use this guide to alert you to possible "food-drug interactions" and to help you learn what you can do to prevent them. In this guide, a food-drug interaction is a change in how a medicine works caused by food, caffeine, or alcohol. A food-drug interaction can: prevent a medicine from working the way it should cause a side effect from a medicine to get worse or better cause a new side effect A medicine can also change the way your body uses a food. Any of these changes can be harmful. This guide covers interactions between some common prescription and over-the counter medicines and food, caffeine, and alcohol. These interactions come from medicine labels that FDA has approved. This guide uses the generic names of medicines, never brand names.