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For example, ' Cyclobenzaprine comes as a tablet and an extended release capsule to take by mouth.' is the dosage form evidence sentence extracted from monograph ' Cyclobenzaprine'.
Therefore, the study mainly uses these two data sets for the purpose of estimation, that is, the first main set of data is from Monograph No: 7, Census of India 1961 (1911 20 to 1951 60) (19, 19) and rest of the data (1971 80 to 2001 08) are from the SRS.
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His daughter, Wendy Durst Kreeger, said he assembled his collection, which came to include everything from monographs to lithographs, in much the same way.
All abstracts were extracted from monographs written as one of the requirements for being awarded a BS degree in computer science.
In the introduction to the 2005 present edition, High Priest Peter H. Gilmore describes LaVey as having compiled The Satanic Bible on his own from monographs he had written about the Church of Satan and its rituals.
This variability may be related to varying definitions of anticholinergic and sedative medications sourced from monographs in different countries, specific sociodemographic or health status characteristics of participants, and factors related to the health care system influencing prescription of these medications.
Many books describe DNA in medicine, from monographs to multiple-author heavy volumes, but the uniqueness of this single-author introductory textbook of molecular medicine is that it simplifies the seemingly complex concepts of DNA in medicine so that readers can find an easy entry into the world of molecular medicine.
Consequently, researchers including HTA-funded trials in their systematic reviews are recommended to use information from the monograph and not from the associated journal article.
From a monograph by the Hungarian André Kertész, the most wistful and tactful of photographers: "1928 — Purchases first Leica".
Burgess on a Sunday would cheerfully range from a monograph on Anglo-Saxon riddles, to airport fiction (one of his great loves), to a new biography of Handel or Wagner to a book about cigars (another great love).
The example above, of a type now known as "Nightingale's Rose" or "Nightingale's Coxcomb", comes from her monograph, "Notes on matters affecting the health, efficiency and hospital administration of the British army" published in 1858.
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