Search results for "SIAB"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Salones de París / 1. Espacios de civilidad

2006

Sociedad civilSociedadSalonesLengua francesaMujerCríticos literariosVidal-Beneyto JoséPoderesPARÍSEscena públicaCivilidadPublicaciones: Obra periodística: Columnas y artículos de opiniónESPACIO PÚBLICOtradiciones InstitucionesModernidadCuestiones privadasEspritAutolimitaciónLecturaAprendizajeIngenioSociabilidad mundanaIndependenciaCríticos culturalesAlternativasAutonomíaObras teatralesLibertadCosiabilidad cultivadaSociabilidad civil
researchProduct

Kaatopaikkakaasun puhdistaminen liikennepolttoaineeksi vastavirtavesiabsorptiolla

2007

kaatopaikatbiokaasuliikennepuhdistusvastavirtavesiabsorptiobiopolttoaineet
researchProduct

Prevalence of eating disorders and eating attacks in narcolepsy

2008

Norbert Dahmen, Julia Becht, Alice Engel, Monika Thommes, Peter TonnPsychiatry Department, University of Mainz, GermanyAbstract: Narcoleptic patients suffer frequently from obesity and type II diabetes. Most patients show a deficit in the energy balance regulating orexinergic system. Nevertheless, it is not known, why narcoleptic patients tend to be obese. We examined 116 narcoleptic patients and 80 controls with the structured interview for anorectic and bulimic eating disorders (SIAB) to test the hypothesis that typical or atypical eating attacks or eating disorders may be more frequent in narcoleptic patients. No difference in the current prevalence of eating disorders bulimia nervosa, b…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeuropsychiatric Disease and TreatmentnarcolepsyNeurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryAnorexiaAnorexia nervosaeating attackBinge-eating disordermental disordersMedicinePsychiatryRC346-429Biological PsychiatryOriginal Researchbusiness.industryBulimia nervosadigestive oral and skin physiologymedicine.diseaseObesityPsychiatry and Mental healthEating disordersbulimiaanorexiaeating disorderAnorecticSIABNeurology. Diseases of the nervous systemmedicine.symptombusinessNarcolepsyRC321-571Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment
researchProduct