Showing 1,901 - 1,920 results of 42,914 for search '(( 5 ((mean decrease) OR (point decrease)) ) OR ( 100 ((teer decrease) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 1.26s Refine Results
  1. 1901
  2. 1902
  3. 1903
  4. 1904
  5. 1905
  6. 1906
  7. 1907

    Individual performance of each trainee. by Xingzhi Cai (16541831)

    Published 2023
    “…Overall, the flexible bronchoscope-guided orotracheal intubation success rate was 93.4% (range, 85.3% to 100%). The mean number of orotracheal intubation procedures per trainee was 31 ± 5 (range, 23 to 40). …”
  8. 1908

    Monthly mean (±SE) soil temperatures at the surface (5 cm) and at depth (100 cm) for unburned (solid line) and burned (dotted line) sites by landscape type from September 2011 to A... by Dana R Nossov (557153)

    Published 2013
    “…On average, fire caused a five-fold decrease in mean surface organic layer thickness, a doubling of water storage in the active layer, a doubling of thaw depth, an increase in soil temperature at the surface (−0.6 to +2.1 ° C) and at 1 m depth (−1.7 to +0.4 ° C), and a two-fold increase in net soil heat input. …”
  9. 1909
  10. 1910
  11. 1911
  12. 1912
  13. 1913
  14. 1914
  15. 1915
  16. 1916
  17. 1917
  18. 1918
  19. 1919

    Image_4_v1_Systemic Immune Modulation Alters Local Bone Regeneration in a Delayed Treatment Composite Model of Non-Union Extremity Trauma.jpeg by Casey E. Vantucci (10528263)

    Published 2022
    “…This overall increase correlated with a decrease in bone volume (P = 0.057) at 6 weeks post-treatment and a significant decrease in mechanical strength at 12 weeks post-treatment compared to untreated rats. …”
  20. 1920

    Image_5_v1_Systemic Immune Modulation Alters Local Bone Regeneration in a Delayed Treatment Composite Model of Non-Union Extremity Trauma.jpeg by Casey E. Vantucci (10528263)

    Published 2022
    “…This overall increase correlated with a decrease in bone volume (P = 0.057) at 6 weeks post-treatment and a significant decrease in mechanical strength at 12 weeks post-treatment compared to untreated rats. …”