IntraText

Cover | Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency | Search
Alphabetical    [«  »]
casual 9
casualties 4
casualty 1
cat 18
catalogue 4
catalogues 3
cataloguing 1
Frequency    [«  »]
18 brief
18 brought
18 calls
18 cat
18 cerebrovascular
18 clean
18 cm

EUGLOREH project

THE STATUS OF HEALTH IN THE EUROPEAN UNION: TOWARDS A HEALTHIER EUROPE - FULL REPORT

Concordances

cat

   Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1    I,     2.  4.  0(1)|         portal/docs/PAGE/PGP_PRD_CAT_PREREL/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_
 2    I,     2.  4.  0(1)|      PAGE/PGP_PRD_CAT_PREREL/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2009/PGE_CAT_
 3    I,     2.  4.  0(1)|         CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2009/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2009_MONTH_02/
 4    I,     2.  5.  0(3)|         portal/docs/PAGE/PGP_PRD_CAT_PREREL/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_
 5    I,     2.  5.  0(3)|      PAGE/PGP_PRD_CAT_PREREL/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2008/PGE_CAT_
 6    I,     2.  5.  0(3)|         CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2008/PGE_CAT_PREREL_YEAR_2008_MONTH_12/
 7   II,     5.  9.  4   | Multicentric Allergy Study). For cat epithelium, this relationship
 8   II,     5.  9.  4   |   Exposure to house dust mite or cat allergen is, however, unlikely
 9   II,     5.  9.  4   |  Dermatophagoides pteronissinus, cat grass, birch,olive pollen,
10   II,     5.  9.  4   |  Pteronyssinus, grass pollen and cat were usually the most prevalent (
11   II,     5.  9.  4   |         ii) timothy grass; (iii) cat; (iv) Cladosporium herbarium; (
12   II,     5.  9.  4   |  pteronyssinus, grass pollen and cat were usually the most prevalent (
13   II,     5.  9.  4   |    pteronyssinus; g6, grass; e1, cat; t3, birch; m6, Alternaria;
14   II,     5.  9.  4   |          birch pollen (7.9%) and cat epithelia (3.8%).~A very
15   II,     5.  9.  7   |         CL (2003): Current mite, cat, and dog allergen exposure,
16   II,     5.  9.  7   |          in the dose response to cat and dust-mite. Indoor Air.
17   II,     5.  9.  7   |        Rossi GA. (2005): “Early” cat ownership and teh risk of
18  III,    10.  5.  1   |      allergen contamination from cat and dogs (Kim et al, 2007;