Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Series TitleSeries Title
-
Reading LevelReading Level
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersContent TypeItem TypeIs Full-Text AvailableSubjectCountry Of PublicationPublisherSourceTarget AudienceDonorLanguagePlace of PublicationContributorsLocation
Done
Filters
Reset
4
result(s) for
"Defecation Juvenile literature."
Sort by:
Poop medicine
by
Loria, Laura, author
in
Feces Juvenile literature.
,
Defecation Juvenile literature.
,
Medicine Juvenile literature.
2018
\"Most of U.S. take medicine to cure our stomach ailments, but poop is also a cure. Poop is a waste product that doctors can put to good use. This volume explores the healing properties of poop, focusing chiefly on fecal transplants. It will discuss the donation, collection, preparation and transplantation of poop, as well as the history of using human and animal waste to restore or enhance health and beauty\"-- Provided by publisher.
Constipation and incontinence in childhood: two sides of the same coin?
by
Clayden, Graham
,
Wright, Anne
in
Academic Achievement
,
Acquisitions & mergers
,
Aging - physiology
2007
FACTORS AFFECTING DELAY IN ACQUISITION OF CONTINENCE The sensation arising from bladder or rectal filling is slight or absent in neuropathic conditions such as neural tube defects, spinal injury or compression. [...]diligence is essential in examination the lower spine and sacrum together with the ankle reflexes for even subtle evidence of spinal dysraphism. 3, 4 Anything that disturbs learning of the link between the perception of bladder/rectal sensation and the social need to use the pot or lavatory is likely to delay acquisition of continence. A similar situation occurs with children who infrequently empty their bladders and appear to be unaware of bladder sensation until it reaches a critical stage and precipitate voiding does not allow them to reach the lavatory in time. Because wetting and faecal incontinence lead to peer and parental adverse pressure, the stress related to this may encourage the child to escape into dissociation and denial thus reducing their vigilance for sensations coming from these troubling areas.
Journal Article
You wouldn't want to live without poop!
by
Woolf, Alex, 1964- author
,
Antram, David, 1958- illustrator
,
Salariya, David
in
Defecation Juvenile literature.
,
Feces Juvenile literature.
,
Animal droppings Juvenile literature.
2016
\"Describes what life would be like without poop.\"-- Provided by publisher.
Why do I poo?
by
Holmes, Kirsty, author
in
Defecation Juvenile literature.
,
Feces Juvenile literature.
,
Digestion Juvenile literature.
2019
Learn how the food you eat becomes poo!