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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: web + 200 + 0.40  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

Newfield Reports Second Quarter 2008 Financial Results
MarketWatch - Jul 23, 2008
Newfield's Woodford production set a second quarter 2008 high of more than 200 MMcfe/d (gross operated). This represents an increase of more than 20% since ...NFX
InvestSource, Inc.: Hunt Gold Corporation Discusses Takeover
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Aug 1, 2008
The Rain Mine reportedly hosts an average grade of 0.40 oz/ton gold and Newmont estimated the resource potential at over 2.0 million ounces of gold over a ...PINK:HGLC - GG - NG
Hong Kong shares end morning lower as banks, commodity stocks ...
華富財經, Hong Kong - Jul 24, 2008
Dickie Wong, an associate director at Friedmann Pacific Investment, said today's correction was not surprising as the index had gained about 2000 points in ...
Are Dividends the Cure for Your Ailing Portfolio?
Morningstar.com, IL - Jul 29, 2008
It features a nice 3.42% yield and a 0.40% expense ratio. Vanguard also offers an exchange-traded fund, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation , that's even cheaper ...

WELT ONLINE
First Security Group Announces Earnings
MarketWatch - Jul 22, 2008
First Security's executive management team will host a conference call and simultaneous web cast on Tuesday, July 22, 2008 at 3:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time ...
Washington Banking Reports Second Quarter 2008 Eps of $0.25 Trading Markets (press release)
all 1,034 news articles »  WBCO - FSGI - OTC:CMTX
Hillsborough paralympian, 24, gets ESPY nod
New Brunswick Home News Tribune, NJ - Jul 20, 2008
Three weeks later, Galli surpassed her own mark by 0.40 seconds and set two more world records in the 200- and 800-meter races at Meet in the Heat in ...
Fraser Papers Announces Second Quarter Financial Results
MarketWatch - Jul 31, 2008
The conference call can also be accessed via web cast on the Fraser Papers web site at www.fraserpapers.com. Fraser Papers is an integrated specialty paper ...TSE:FPS
Copper Mountain Mining Corporation - Exploration Update: Near ...
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada - Jul 16, 2008
Significant intersections include drill-hole P2-119 which intersected 230 feet of 0.50% Cu and drill-hole P2-122 which cut 200 feet of 0.43% Cu. ...CVE:CUM
Energy efficiency a selling point with new homes
Louisville Courier-Journal, KY - Jul 12, 2008
Installing windows with a U-factor of no more than 0.40 to reduce heat loss. U-factor ratings generally fall between .20 and 1.20. ...
Bertha could lose steam soon
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA - Jul 8, 2008
According to its Web site, the Palm Center "is committed to keeping researchers, journalists and the general public informed of the latest developments in ...
Source: Google News

Web server workload characterization: the search for invariants -
MF Arlitt, CL Williamson - ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review, 1996 - portal.acm.org
... 6 Size Distribution File size distribution is Pareto with 0.40< CY<0.63 ... 10
Wide Area Web servers are accessed by 1000?s of domains, ...

Web document clustering: a feasibility demonstration -
O Zamir, O Etzioni - Proceedings of the 21st annual international ACM SIGIR …, 1998 - portal.acm.org
... collections of 200 Web documents. ... of the various clustering algorithms with that
of the original ranked list, averaged over the IO Web document collections ... 0.40 ...

Crop Residues: Agriculture?s Largest Harvest -
V Smil - BioScience, 1999 - JSTOR
... 1.3, rather than just 1.2, will add almost 200 Mt more ... content of various cereal
straws ranges between 0.4 and 1.3 ... of more than 100 World Wide Web sites devoted ...

Mesozooplankton influences on the microbial food web: Direct and indirect trophic interactions in … -
A Calbet, MR Landry - Limnology and Oceanography, 1999 - JSTOR
... Mesozooplankton and the microbial food web Table 1. Initial conditions ... MESO
(200-2,000-utm) or MICRO (60-200-/mm) size ... 3.0X105 110 23 0.169 0.177 95.5 (0.4X ...

Effect of Web Reinforcement on High-Strength Concrete Deep Beams -
KH Tan, FK Kong, S Teng, LW Weng - ACI Structural Journal, 1997 - ACI
... horizontal web bars, and (iii) 10-mm (0.4-in.) di ... is followed by the different type
of web reinforcement and ... natural sand Slump for concrete 150 to 200 mm Free ...

… affinity constants and phosphorus release rates from the microbial food web in Villefranche Bay, … -
T Tanaka, F Rassoulzadegan, TF Thingstad - Limnology and Oceanography, 2003 - JSTOR
... l i i i 1154 v I v. P cycling through microbial food web Table 2 ... of 32p after cold
chase was observed in the <200, <5, and <2 /um filtrates (0.40%- 0.49% of ...

[PDF] Web-Based Supplementary Materials for ?Residual-Based Diagnostics for Structural Equation Models? …
BN Sanchez - biometrics.tibs.org
... Page 6. Web Table 1 Comparison of CVM distribution tests: Half-naive vs. ... Null Model
200 0.05 0.048 0.053 0.049 (?, ? ~ Normal) 300 0.05 0.046 0.044 0.048 ...
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Finding information on the World Wide Web: the retrieval effectiveness of search engines -
M Gordon, P Pathak - Information Processing and Management, 1999 - Elsevier
... eight altogether). At that point, the URLs of the top 200 Web pages were
saved in rank order for each search engine. A searcher ...

[PDF] Genre classification of web pages
B Stein, S Meyer zu Eissen - Proceedings of the 27th German Conference on Artificial …, 2004 - ling.uni-potsdam.de
Genre Classification of Web Pages Benno Stein Bauhaus University Weimar Web Technology
and IS Group ... Stein Background: How to Satisfy a Web Information Need ...

[PDF] Essential fatty acids in the planktonic food web and their ecological role for higher trophic levels -
M Kainz, MT Arts, A Mazumder - Limnology and Oceanography, 2004 - new.aslo.org
... lakes/reservoirs) within the planktonic food web, from seston ... 100?200 m), to
mesoplankton (meso; 200?500 m ... 1.2 ( 0.6) 0.8 ( 0.4) 2.3 ( 0.4) 1.2 ( 0.2) 0.3 ...
-

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

3-D Cardiac MRI Spots Heart Trouble

November 19, 2006 03:58:00 PM PST

SUNDAY, Nov. 19 (HealthDay News) -- A technology called whole-heart MRI shows promise as a noninvasive method of detecting major blockages in coronary arteries, Japanese researchers report.

Whole-heart MRI provides 3-D images of the heart and its blood vessels. It may offer an alterative to invasive procedures (such as injecting dyes) or those that use radiation to see inside the heart, experts say.

However, it is still often difficult to get clear images of the heart using MRI. The constant beating of the heart, combined with a patient's breathing, can cause blurred images that are unusable.

Typically, whole-heart MRI images are collected during the brief moment that the heart rests between beats (diastole). In this study, the researchers tested whether better images could be collected when the heart was actively contracting to pump blood (systole).

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The study of 113 patients was conducted by a team from Mie University Hospital and Matsusaka Central Hospital in Japan.

They found that in 48 of the patients, especially those with faster heart rates, the best time to collect whole-heart MRI images was during the systole period.

The researchers concluded that the optimal moment for collecting whole-heart MRI images can vary among patients, however.

The study is in the Nov. 21 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

More information

The American College of Radiology/Radiological Society of North America has more about cardiac MRI.

 

Hemophilia Drug Linked to Blood Clots in Wounded U.S. Iraq Soldiers

A drug used to stop bleeding from hemophilia has been injected in more than 1,000 wounded soldiers in Iraq, and medical evidence shows that this procedure has created life-threatening blood clots, the Baltimore Sun reports.

In a detailed investigative report, the newspaper documents the link between the use of the drug, Recombinant Activated Factor VII, and a number of incidents of sometimes fatal blood clots appearing in the lungs, hearts and brains of U.S. soldiers who had undergone surgery in Iraq. While not being able to get military doctors to acknowledge that any specific case of blood clotting was caused by using Factor VII, the Sun reports that the U.S. military command in Iraq has recommended the drug's use to stem heavy bleeding in wounded soldiers.

"When it works, it's amazing," the newspaper quotes Col. John B. Holcomb, an Army trauma surgeon and the service's top adviser on combat medical care, as saying. "It's one of the most useful new tools we have."

This decision apparently was made despite many scientific reports warning that using the drug in people with normal blood could cause blood clots and strokes. Researchers from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration reported last January that 43 blood clot deaths had resulted from injections of Factor VII.

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Device Detects Those Most Susceptible to Post-Surgical Infection

A "completely non-invasive" scanner may hold the answer to reducing the number of infections that occur in post-surgical patients while they're recovering in the hospital.

BBC News reports that doctors at University Hospital in North Durham, England, have developed a hand-held device that uses an infra-red light to detect whether the blood going to the incision in a patient recovering from an operation has enough oxygen. Lack of oxygen in the blood is a key contributing factor to infection, the BBC reports, and this can lead to a particularly nasty invasion, methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), one of the most persistent bacterial hospital infections.

The BBC cites a study done by the hospital in which the scanner detected poor oxygen supply in the blood of 17 out of 59 post-surgical patients. All 17 subsequently developed infections, the BBC reports.

Lead researcher Dr. David Harrison is quoted as saying, "To be able to identify those patients most at risk of infection at just 12 hours after surgery gives you the opportunity to actually do something about it."

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Potency of U.S. Avian Flu Vaccine Supply is Deteriorating

Not that there is all that much vaccine to protect against a major outbreak of avian flu, but the U.S. supply of about 3.75 million doses is losing its potency.

Bloomberg News reports U.S. government officials saying the original batch of 3.75 million doses against H5N1 avian influenza has started to deteriorate. The revelation came after the vaccine's maker, Sanofi-Aventis SA, discovered the reduction in strength after routine testing.

There are now fewer than 3 million full strength doses, Bloomberg News quotes Bill Hall, an HHS spokesman, as saying. Nevertheless, if a major outbreak of avian flu were to occur in the U.S., the wire service quotes Hall as saying, it "would still most likely be used if we needed it tomorrow or next week. We would use the full- potency vaccine first."

While concern about an worldwide human pandemic of bird flu -- which has infected tens of millions of fowl -- has eased somewhat, World Health Organization statistics show that H5N1 has killed 153 people and infected a total of 258. So far, there have been no confirmed cases of avian flu being transmitted from human to human.

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M.D. Affiliated With Anti-Contraception Group Named to Head U.S. Family Planning Agency

A Massachusetts doctor who is the medical director of an organization that opposes abortion, contraception and most family planning methods is President Bush's choice to head the federal department that finances most of the programs the doctor's organization opposes.

The appointment of Dr. Eric Keroack to head the U.S. Office of Population Affairs, whose annual $283 million budget is used to fund family planning programs, met with Congressional criticism and angered one of the nation's largest family planning groups. Keroack is affiliated with A Woman's Concern, a Marblehead, Mass. Organization that the Associated Press quotes from its statement of faith as designed "help women escape the temptation and violence of abortion." The organization also opposes contraception, according to the wire service.

The Office of Family Planning, one of the Office of Population Affairs' divisions, "is designed to provide access to contraceptive supplies and information to all who want and need them," according to its statement of purpose.

Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-Mass.) and the Planned Parenthood Federation of America have called for the President to withdraw Keroack's appointment, which does not need Congressional approval.

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Dioxin May Affect Male Reproductive System

Exposure to TCDD, the most toxic dioxin in the herbicide Agent Orange, may disrupt the male reproductive system in a number of ways, says a study of 2,000 U.S. Air Force veterans who served in the Vietnam War.

Researchers at the UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas found evidence that TCDD may lower testosterone levels and limit the growth of the prostate gland. The study appears in the November issue of the journal Environmental Health.

"Until now, we did not have very good evidence whether or not dioxins affect the human reproductive system," urologist and lead author Dr. Amit Gupta said in a statement. "Now we know that there is a link between dioxins and the human prostate leading us to speculate that dioxins might be decreasing growth of the prostate in humans like they do in animals."

The study found that veterans exposed to TCDD had lower rates of an enlarged prostate disorder called benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH).

"It may be construed that a decrease in the risk of BPH is not a harmful effect, but the larger picture is that dioxins are affecting the normal growth and development of the reproductive system. Moreover, several effective treatments are available for BPH and thus reduction of BPH by a toxic compound is not a desirable effect," Gupta said.

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Chocolate Milk May Boost Exercise Stamina

Chocolate milk may boost athletic endurance, suggests an Indiana University study that was partly funded by the Dairy and Nutrition Council.

Researchers had a small group of fit athletes do hard workouts on a stationary bike, then drink either low-fat chocolate milk, a fluid replacement drink (Gatorade), or a carbohydrate replacement drink (Endurox R4). A few hours later, the athletes were told to ride the bike again until they were exhausted, the Associated Press reported.

The test was repeated three times, once with each type of beverage. The study found participants exercised up to 54 percent longer after drinking chocolate milk than when they drank the carbohydrate drink. There was no significant difference between the milk and the fluid-replacement drink.

 
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