Home
Database Statistics
Help System
About
Literature
Projects
Events
Login / Register
[Hyperlipidemia. How to make a diagnosis and appropriate prescription].
1992
Y Fukuo
Second Department of Internal Medicine, Nippon Medical School.
Associated MeSH Terms
Cite
UI
MeSH Term
Description
Entries
D006949
Hyperlipidemias
Conditions with excess LIPIDS in the blood.
Hyperlipemia,Hyperlipidemia,Lipemia,Lipidemia,Hyperlipemias,Lipemias,Lipidemias
D006801
Humans
Members of the species Homo sapiens.
Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
Related Publications
Y Fukuo
How to make a psychiatric diagnosis.
January 1973, Medical times,
Y Fukuo
Cushing's: how to make the diagnosis.
February 1999, The Practitioner,
Y Fukuo
Screening for diabetes: how to make a diagnosis.
August 1998, Community nurse,
Y Fukuo
Nonsecretory multiple myeloma, how to make a diagnosis?
January 2010, Indian journal of orthopaedics,
Y Fukuo
How to make a fast diagnosis in invasive aspergillosis.
April 2019, Medical mycology,
Y Fukuo
Late-life depression: how to make a difficult diagnosis.
March 1997, Geriatrics,
Y Fukuo
The relationship between the ability to make a diagnosis and to select appropriate remedial procedures.
April 1948, The Journal of general psychology,
Y Fukuo
How does a pathologist make a diagnosis?
January 2009, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine,
Y Fukuo
How does a pathologist make a diagnosis?
October 1967, Archives of pathology,
Y Fukuo
How to Make Nursing Diagnosis Work How to Make Nursing Diagnosis Work Appleton & Lange 348pp £38.45 0-8385-1608-4.
October 1989, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987),
Export Citation
×
Select Citation Style to be generated
APA
Vancouver
Harvard
BibTeX
Endnote
Generated Citation:
Selection Actions
Export Citations
Download Data
Save To My Collection
Need Help?
Explore features, get started with a guided tour, or view relevant help articles.
Start Tour
Go to Related Help Article
Copied contents to your clipboard!
Publications over Time
×
Save Item To Your Collection
×
Collection Name
Your saved publications will be grouped by this name - think of it like a folder to group related publications and results.
Use default name