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== 24-hour urine collection == |
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'''24-hour urine collection''' is a simple diagnostic procedure that measures the components of urine. The test is noninvasive (the skin is not pierced), and is used to assess kidney (renal) function.<ref name=hency> |
'''24-hour urine collection''' is a simple diagnostic procedure that measures the components of [[urine]]. The test is noninvasive (the skin is not pierced), and is used to assess kidney (renal) function.<ref name=hency> |
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[https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/encyclopedia/content.aspx?ContentTypeID=92&ContentID=P08955 Health Encyclopedia </ref> |
[https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/encyclopedia/content.aspx?ContentTypeID=92&ContentID=P08955 Health Encyclopedia] </ref> |
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Twenty-four hour urine collection is performed by collecting a person's urine in a special container over a 24-hour period. The container must be kept cool during this time until it is returned to the lab for analysis.<ref name=hency/> |
Twenty-four hour urine collection is performed by collecting a person's urine in a special container over a 24-hour period. The container must be kept cool during this time until it is returned to the lab for analysis.<ref name=hency/> |
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== [[Gareth Bale]] == |
== [[Gareth Bale]] == |
Revision as of 20:25, 12 August 2015
24-hour urine collection
24-hour urine collection is a simple diagnostic procedure that measures the components of urine. The test is noninvasive (the skin is not pierced), and is used to assess kidney (renal) function.[1]
Twenty-four hour urine collection is performed by collecting a person's urine in a special container over a 24-hour period. The container must be kept cool during this time until it is returned to the lab for analysis.[1]
? Gareth Bale's incredible goal against Barcelona on YouTube
Gareth Bale's incredible goal against Barcelona on YouTube
Marathons
If Cynthia Lucero had crossed the finish line of the 2002 Boston Marathon, it is possible only friends and family would have remembered her triumph. (...) collapsed just four miles from her destination, her life - and her death - took on a greater meaning for marathoners and spectators alike. [http://www.remembercynthia.com/Allston_4_17_03.htm
Siegel took blood samples from 80 Boston Marathon runners before and after the race. The morning after, he found elevated levels of inflammatory and clotting factors in the runners' blood. Based on this finding, Siegel recommends all marathoners take one blood-thinning aspirin the day before the race to reduce the risk of clots. [http://www.remembercynthia.com/ChicagoSunTimes.htm Gatorade [http://www.apnewsarchive.com/2002/Fluid-Cited-in-Marathoner-s-Death/id-424edce6ed89d8adcb14d4d97c0448a3
xx
Tomasz Wróblewski (journalist)
Tomasz Wróblewski | |
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Born | |
Nationality | Polish |
Tomasz Wróblewski (b. 5 May 1959) is a Polish journalist. Red in chief of Newsweek Polska (2001–2004, 2005–2006), Dziennik Gazeta Prawna (2010–2011), Rzeczpospolita, (2011–2012).
Tomasz Wróblewski (ur. 5 maja 1959 w Warszawie) – polski dziennikarz i publicysta. Redaktor naczelny tygodnika „Newsweek Polska” (2001–2004, 2005–2006), magazynu „Profit”, „Dziennika Gazety Prawnej” (2010–2011), dziennika „Rzeczpospolita” (2011–2012).
Wróblewski worked for many years at Polityka,[1] which he left in 1982, and for the Trójka radio station.[2] After the end of the Martial law in Poland, he was editor of Gazeta Bankowa[citation needed]. He returned to Polityka in 1996[citation needed].
Wróblewski retired in 2004.
References
- ^ Andrzej Krzysztof Wróblewski. Dzienniki znalezione przez bezpiekę. Warsaw, 2008.
- ^ Historia Trójki rok po roku