Advanced Search
Display options
Filter resources
Text Availability
Article type
Publication date
Species
Language
Sex
Age
Showing 13 to 24 of 24 entries
Sorted by: Best Match Show Resources per page
Stress testing in women.

Circulation

Davidson DM.
PMID: 7449070
Circulation. 1981 Feb;63(2):468-9.

No abstract available.

[Management of stress in a diabetic patient].

La Revue du praticien

Thervet F, Grimaldi A.
PMID: 7466267
Rev Prat. 1981 Feb 11;31(9):647-8, 651-2, 655.

No abstract available.

Physical effects of stress.

Health news (Waltham, Mass.)

[No authors listed]
PMID: 9516334
Health News. 1998 Feb 17;4(2):7.

No abstract available.

[Stress: where are we going?].

Vnitrni lekarstvi

Schreiber V.
PMID: 3765399
Vnitr Lek. 1986 May;32(5):417-9.

No abstract available.

Human stress response and its possible relationship to disease.

Dental clinics of North America

Troxler RG.
PMID: 3536627
Dent Clin North Am. 1986 Oct;30(4):S11-27.

No abstract available.

Present tension.

The Journal of the Kansas Medical Society

Gray DE.
PMID: 7351515
J Kans Med Soc. 1980 Feb;81(2):89-90, 94.

No abstract available.

Stress response in the human body.

JPMA. The Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association

[No authors listed]
PMID: 409861
J Pak Med Assoc. 1977 Mar;27(3):292.

No abstract available.

Emotions and health. Can stress make you sick?.

Harvard health letter

[No authors listed]
PMID: 9577252
Harv Health Lett. 1998 Apr;23(6):1-3.

No abstract available.

[From "The Best of Image": research related to stress].

[Kango] Japanese journal of nursing

Downs FS.
PMID: 3851047
Kango. 1985 Jan;37(1):113-22.

No abstract available.

[Pathophysiology of stress (author's transl)].

Revista medica de Chile

Puelma HD, Vargas L.
PMID: 897424
Rev Med Chil. 1977 May;105(5):341-4.

No abstract available.

Stress--scourge or stimulant?.

Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987)

Hughes J.
PMID: 2121251
Nurs Stand. 1990 Oct 17-23;5(4):30-3. doi: 10.7748/ns.5.4.30.s40.

No abstract available.

Coping, stress, stressors and health consequences.

Neuropsychobiology

Vogel WH.
PMID: 4047374
Neuropsychobiology. 1985;13(3):129-35. doi: 10.1159/000118175.

The conventional sequence of stressful event (stressor) causing stress (biochemical and physiological changes) which, in turn, causes pathological consequences (diseases) is examined. A number of experiments are described which show that biochemical, physiological and/or pathological changes in an organism...

Showing 13 to 24 of 24 entries