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Dependent variables were short-term and long-term quitting.
The main outcome variable was short-term survival (STS) defined as a horse being discharged from the hospital, or not.
Because the lengths of the explanatory-variable gradients were short, the method of redundancy analysis was selected over analysis by canonical correspondence, as suggested by ter Braak and Smilauer (1998).
In the current study both the previously mentioned laboratory variables were associated with poor short-term outcome as shown at the univariate analysis (bilirubin OR 1.11; 95% CI 1.04 1.18; P = 0.001 and AP > 1.5 ULN OR 3.85; 95% CI 1.31 11.32; P = 0.01).
Forty-three variables were found from short-term intervention studies in the meta-analysis.
Other secondary outcome variables were hospital and short-term nursing home LOS, institutionalization as measured by institutional residence rate, and mortality during 18 months after the rehabilitation.
Because each read had a variable length, some reads were shorter than 50 bases, and thus the stitched read sequence lengths were not always 100.
A third limitation is that the CGM-derived variables were acquired during a short period of time prior to the scan and thus represent only a "snapshot" rather than a robust assessment of diurnal glucose characteristics.
Other variables predictive of ICS change were short-acting β-agonist use, socioeconomic status, and rate of asthma consultation at baseline.
Thromboelastometry variables were characterized by a shorter clotting time and clot-formation time, as well as increased alpha angle and maximum clot firmness.
The period of observation for the analyses including macro-level variables was, however, shorter, starting from 1965.
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