(1) "If anything, the past few years have seen a trend of shoppers moving away from discounters towards premium supermarkets like Edeka and Rewe, many of whom have copied their cheaper rivals' success and offer own-brand goods.
(2) Therefore, REW showed no significant group difference after 12 months.
(3) Throughout the study, the reduction of excess weight (REW) was greater in dF patients (P less than 0.05 only at 4 and 6 months).
(4) Type of obesity (android or gynoid) as determined by waist to hip ratio had no significant impact on either weight loss, REW, reductions of waist and hip circumferences, or on waist to hip ratio changes.
(5) Flights were provided by WOW Air (0118 321 8384, wowair.co.uk ), which flies from Gatwick to Reykjavik from about £140 return Kate Rew is author of Wild Swim (Guardian Books, £7.49) and founder of the Outdoor Swimming Society
(6) Chest wall resistance (Rew) and lung tissue resistance (Rti) were computed.
(7) • visitoslo.com Kate Rew is the founder of the free, crowd-sourced, worldwide swim map and the Outdoor Swimming Society
(8) Only two surveyed companies, Ikea and the German REWE group, scored the maximum 12 points.
Rez
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) The normotensive patients showed an artery in the REZ only in 41.7% of cases.
(2) Electrophysiologic recordings were made from patients with hemifacial spasm (HFS) during microvascular decompression (MVD) operations to see if spasm and synkinesis are caused by ephaptic transmission at the site of lesion (root entry zone [REZ] of the facial nerve).
(3) Latencies of nasalis muscle responses to magStim were, therefore, compared with those obtained by direct electrical stimulation of the facial nerve (a) at the root exit zone (REZ); (b) at the porus of the facial canal; and (c) in the stylomastoid fossa during microvascular decompression operations in the cerebellopontine angle (CPA).
(4) Recently, it has been supposed, that an arterial compression of the left root entry zone (REZ) of the cranial nerves IX and X by looping arteries may play a pathogenetic role.
(5) In children treated for early marrow relapse, the remission rate in study ALL-REZ 85 was superior (86% vs 62%).
(6) Initial treatment and relapse therapy were similar in all patients according to the BFM- and CoALL-protocols (front line: 38 patients according to BFM-protocols and 13 patients according to CoALL-protocols; relapse: 12 patients in study ALL-REZ-BFM 83, 17 in ALL-REZ-BFM 85, 20 in ALL-REZ-BFM 87, and two in ALL-REZ-BFM 90).
(7) One sceptical observer of many presentations at the Future Cities Summit, Jonathan Rez of the University of New South Wales, suggests that “a smarter way” to build cities “might be for architects and urban planners to have psychologists and ethnographers on the team.” That would certainly be one way to acquire a better understanding of what technologists call the “end user” – in this case, the citizen.
(8) Between April 1985 and March 1987 130 children and adolescents up to 18 years of age with first relapse of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were registered on the stratified and randomized multicentric trial ALL-REZ BFM 85 designed for patients pretreated with intensive front-line therapies.
(9) The aim of the work was to test the binding capacity of the radiopharmaceutical preparation indium111 oxinate prepared in the Nuclear Research Institute of the Czechoslovak Academy of Science in Rez, its effect on the survival of leucocytes and its sterility.
(10) In the six patients with trigeminal neuralgia, the presence of a vascular structure at the REZ of the fifth nerve was identified.
(11) The response from the orbicularis oculi muscle to electrical stimulation of the marginal mandibular nerve had a 2.2-msec longer latency (average of 16 patients) than the sum of the conduction times of the parts of the facial nerve that would be involved if the response was the result of ephaptic transmission at the REZ of the seventh cranial nerve.
(12) Results of the BMF study group trials ALL-REZ 83 and 85 for relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are presented.
(13) In the 85 asymptomatic patients, examination of 170 trigeminal nerves revealed that 30% had contact between a vascular structure and the fifth nerve at the REZ, but only 2% had actual deformity.
(14) By using a pattern of REZ topography developed from this information we obtained the following results: In 81% of the evaluable angiographies of hypertensive patients we found an artery in the left REZ of cranial nerves IX and X.
(15) Ninety-five children and adolescents with their first relapse of ALL were treated in the multicentric prospective trial ALL-REZ BFM 83.
(16) MR imaging clearly demonstrated the course of the fifth nerve from its root entry zone (REZ) to the Meckel cave and its relationship to the surrounding vertebrobasilar system.
(17) Our results support the hypothesis that essential hypertension may be associated with neurovascular compression of the left REZ of cranial nerves IX and X.
(18) In 80% of the angiograms of the hypertensive patients that could be evaluated, an artery crossed the left REZ of cranial nerves IX and X.
(19) In 9 cases (13%), both the posterior inferior cerebellar artery and the vertebral artery appeared in the REZ.
(20) According to the hypothesis of Jannetta, an arterial compression of the left root entry zone (REZ) of cranial nerves IX and X by looping arteries could play an important role in the pathogenesis of essential hypertension.