| Results 1 - 42 of 42 | ||
| 1 | ||
|
Shim T N - - 2012
Male genital lichen sclerosus (MGLSc) is an acquired cutaneous disease of uncertain aetiology. It causes acute and chronic balanoposthitis and scarring that can result in significant sexual and urinary dysfunction and has been associated with squamous carcinoma of the penis. The aetiopathogenesis of MGLSc is unknown.
|
||
|
Vinken Mathieu - - 2012
Because of their critical role as goalkeepers of hepatic homeostasis, gap junctions are frequent targets in liver disease. This concept has been demonstrated on many occasions in the light of hepatocarcinogenesis. Relatively little focus has been put on the fate of gap junctions in other liver pathologies, including hepatitis, liver ...
|
||
|
Chrostek Lech - - 2012
AIMS: The aim of this study was to test whether liver diseases of alcoholic and non-alcoholic origin cause false-positive carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) results when the particle-enhanced immunonephelometry for CDT assays is used and to assess the effect of liver disease severity on N-Latex CDT results. METHODS: Blood was sampled from ...
|
||
|
Haimovic Adele - - 2012
Sarcoidosis is a common systemic, noncaseating granulomatous disease of unknown etiology. The development of sarcoidosis has been associated with a number of environmental factors and genes. Cutaneous sarcoidosis, the "great imitator," can baffle clinicians because of its diverse manifestations and its ability to resemble both common and rare cutaneous diseases. ...
|
||
|
Khungar Vandana - - 2012
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) represents a continuum of transient and reversible neurologic and psychiatric dysfunction. It is a reversible state of impaired cognitive function or altered consciousness in patients with liver disease or portosystemic shunting. Over the last several years, high-quality studies have been conducted on various pharmacologic therapies for HE; ...
|
||
|
Gossard Andrea A - - 2012
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is an inflammatory liver disease that predominantly affects females. The disease is characterized histologically by interface hepatitis, biochemically by increased aspartate and alanine aminotransferase levels, and serologically by the presence of autoantibodies and elevated levels of immunoglobulin G. AIH affects both adults and children, and is particularly ...
|
||
|
Regelmann Molly O - - 2012
Background: Hyperthyroidism has been associated with liver function abnormalities; however, cholestasis as the presenting feature of adolescent Graves' disease has not been previously reported. Patient Summary: The patient was a 17-year-old girl who presented with severe cholestasis and was found to have Graves' disease. She also had a positive hepatitis ...
|
||
|
Cainelli Francesca - - 2012
Liver diseases are an important and largely neglected health issue in low and middle income countries, which carry the highest burden. In this Topic Highlight, experts review hepatitis B and E, alcoholic liver disease, hepatic diseases in human immunodeficiency virus -infected individuals, hepatocellular carcinoma. Numerous gaps in our knowledge that ...
|
||
|
Khungar Vandana - - 2012
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a potentially reversible state of impaired cognitive function or altered consciousness in patients with liver disease or portosystemic shunting. Overt HE is a particularly pressing problem. Given the many targets of treatment and lack of a clear singular cause of overt HE, there is no consensus ...
|
||
|
Jang Sung Yeol - - 2012
Castleman's disease is a rare disease characterized by lymph node hyperplasia. Although Castleman's disease can occur wherever lymphoid tissue is found, it rarely appears in the abdominal cavity, and is especially rare adjacent to the liver. Here, we report a rare case of Castleman's disease in the portal area that ...
|
||
|
Zhang Haiyuan - - 2012
Biomarkers are currently widely used to diagnose diseases, monitor treatments, and evaluate potential drug candidates. Research of differential Omics accelerate the advancements of biomarkers' discovery. By extracting biological knowledge from the 'omics' through integration, integrative system biology creates predictive models of cells, organs, biochemical processes and complete organisms, in addition ...
|
||
|
Ueno Yoshiyuki - - 2012
The death due to liver diseases accounts for more the 35,000 cases every year in Japan for decades. Among these liver diseases, the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare of Japan has named both fulminant hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) as intractable liver diseases, since the precise mechanism of ...
|
||
|
Fujii Kenji - - 2012
A 17-year-old woman was previously diagnosed with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) by liver biopsy. Adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD) was subsequently diagnosed on the basis of high fever, arthralgia, erythema, leukocytosis (>80% granulocytes), cervical lymph node swelling, splenomegaly, and hyperferritinemia. Her symptoms and liver dysfunction improved with prednisolone of 60 mg daily ...
|
||
|
Jawairia Mahreema - - 2012
Cryptogenic cirrhosis (CC) is defined as cirrhosis occurring in an individual without an identifiable cause of liver disease, such as excessive alcohol consumption, viral hepatitis infection, hemochromatosis, autoimmune hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, chronic intake of medications that could induce cirrhosis, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, Wilson's disease, or any other ...
|
||
|
Amagai Masayuki - - 2011
Much of the original research on desmosomes and their biochemical components was through analysis of skin and mucous membranes. The identification of desmogleins 1 and 3, desmosomal adhesion glycoproteins, as targets in pemphigus, a fatal autoimmune blistering disease of the skin and mucous membranes, provided the first link between desmosomes, ...
|
||
|
Weber Wilfried - - 2011
Synthetic biology aims to create functional devices, systems and organisms with novel and useful functions on the basis of catalogued and standardized biological building blocks. Although they were initially constructed to elucidate the dynamics of simple processes, designed devices now contribute to the understanding of disease mechanisms, provide novel diagnostic ...
|
||
|
Guerrero-Bosagna Carlos - - 2011
Environmental epigenetics has an important role in regulating phenotype formation or disease etiology. The ability of environmental factors and exposures early in life to alter somatic cell epigenomes and subsequent development is a critical factor in how environment affects biology. Environmental epigenetics provides a molecular mechanism to explain long term ...
|
||
|
Chan Wilson C W - - 2011
The intervertebral disks along the spine provide motion and protection against mechanical loading. The 3 structural components, nucleus pulposus, annulus fibrosus, and cartilage endplate, function as a synergistic unit, though each has its own role. The cells within each of these components have distinct origins in development and morphology, producing ...
|
||
|
Mitchison N Avrion - - 2011
An archive of congenital human diseases is presented, aiming to contain all those where recessive (biallelic) can be compared with X-linked and/or dominant (monoallelic) inheritance. A significant deficit of recessive inheritance is evident, both in disease inheritance and in contribution to inheritance per known disease gene. The deficit contrasts with ...
|
||
|
Rehman Samrina - - 2011
ABSTRACT: Dupuytren's disease (DD) is an ill-defined fibroproliferative disorder of the palm of the hands leading to digital contracture. DD commonly occurs in individuals of northern European extraction. Cellular components and processes associated with DD pathogenesis include altered gene and protein expression of cytokines, growth factors, adhesion molecules, and extracellular ...
|
||
|
Tyner Jeffrey W - - 2011
Comment on: Jung AS, et al. Cell Cycle 2011; 10:1838-44.
|
||
|
Corfield Anthony P - - 2011
IBDs (inflammatory bowel diseases) are a group of diseases affecting the gastrointestinal tract. The diseases are multifactorial and cover genetic aspects: susceptibility genes, innate and adaptive responses to inflammation, and structure and efficacy of the mucosal protective barrier. Animal models of IBD have been developed to gain further knowledge of ...
|
||
|
Bilbo Staci D - - 2011
A wide range of hyperimmune-associated diseases plague post-industrial society, with a prevalence and impact that is staggering. Strong evidence points towards a loss of helminths from the ecosystem of the human body (the human biome) as the most important factor in this epidemic. Helminths, intestinal worms which are largely eradicated ...
|
||
|
Jefferson J Ashley - - 2011
The explosion of podocyte biology during the last decade has radically altered our views on the pathophysiologic process of proteinuria, glomerular disease, and progressive kidney disease. In this review, we highlight some of these landmark findings, but focus on recent advances in the field and implications for translating this biology ...
|
||
|
Wallner Stefan - - 2011
Plasmalogens are a class of phospholipids carrying a vinyl ether bond in sn-1 and an ester bond in sn-2 position of the glycerol backbone. Although they are widespread in all tissues and represent up to 18% of the total phospholipid mass in humans, their physiological function is still poorly understood. ...
|
||
|
Hurst David S - - 2011
The role of allergy in chronic otitis media with effusion (OME) is controversial. New evidence from cellular biology and immunology explain the basics of allergic reactions and allow more accurate diagnosis of allergies and inflammatory disease throughout the unified airway. This article examines the epidemiologic, methodological, and immunologic studies of ...
|
||
|
Loscalzo Joseph - - 2011
Contemporary views of human disease are based on simple correlation between clinical syndromes and pathological analysis dating from the late 19th century. Although this approach to disease diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment has served the medical establishment and society well for many years, it has serious shortcomings for the modern era ...
|
||
|
Stevens Lori - - 2011
A complete picture of Chagas disease requires an appreciation of the many species of kissing bugs and their role in transmitting this disease to humans and other mammals. This chapter provides an overview of the taxonomy of the major species of kissing bugs and their evolution. Knowledge of systematics and ...
|
||
|
De Vita Salvatore - - 2011
The treatment of the cryoglobulinemic syndrome or vasculitis (CV) must be targeted to the individual patient, and requires clinical expertise and knowledge of the disease biology. In general, the treatment is suggested by the clinical picture, but biologic issues should also be considered. Both immunosuppressive and antiviral approaches deserve equal ...
|
||
|
Lieberman Raquel L - - 2011
Mutations in both acid-β-glucosidase (GCase) and saposin C lead to Gaucher disease, the most common lysosomal storage disorder. The past several years have seen an explosion of structural and biochemical information for these proteins, which have provided new insight into the biology and pathogenesis of Gaucher disease, as well as ...
|
||
|
Hippocrates.
On the Sacred Disease / Hippocrates ; translated by Francis Adams
|
||
|
Meisterling R C - - 1998
If your doctor has told you that your knee pain is caused by Osgood-Schlatter disease (OSD), you're not alone. OSD is common in active, rapidly growing teens. It usually goes away on its own within 12 to 24 months, but during its course, you and your doctor can work together ...
|
||
|
Adeniji K A - - 1997
This study is a 10 year review of the benign diseases of the breast in Ile-Ife, Nigeria. A total of 362 cases were found. Three hundred and forty (95%) of the diseases occurred in females while 18 (5%) occurred in males giving a female-male ratio of 19:1. Fibroadenoma was the ...
|
||
|
Ahn H J - - 1990
Fibrocystic disease of the breast has been generally regarded as a disorder due to either excess hormonal stimulation or an exaggerated proliferative response by hypersensitive breast epithelium. The unique lobular lesion-adenosis- and its variants have been regarded as non-neoplastic and non-preneoplastic glandular hypertrophy and hyperplasia, and have different organoid patterns ...
|
||
|
Parfrey N A - - 1985
Elastosis, the presence of clumps of elastic fibers, is known to occur frequently in association with breast carcinoma. To test the hypothesis that the degree of elastosis increases progressively in fibrocystic disease with the severity of epitheliosis (epithelial hyperplasia, papillomatosis; widely believed to be the only premalignant component of fibrocystic ...
|
||
|
Berkowitz G S - - 1985
The association between estrogen replacement therapy and fibrocystic breast disease was assessed in a hospital-based case-control study undertaken in Connecticut from 1979 to 1981. The cases were 143 postmenopausal women with biopsy-confirmed fibrocystic breast disease, and the controls were 355 postmenopausal women with other surgical conditions. Use of estrogen replacement ...
|
||
|
Owen J H - - 1982
Three cases of Peyronie's disease are described, in which the condition is associated with hypertension and atherosclerosis. Another common factor is the use of beta-blocking agents in their treatment. A plea is made for an urgent review of the aetiology of Peyronie's disease bearing in mind the possibility of an ...
|
||
|
Snell K C - - 1975
In comparison with other rodents, the mastomys is unique as regards the patterns of neoplastic and non-neoplastic diseases that it develops, some of which may constitute suitable animal models for corresponding diseases of man. Among the spontaneous diseases commonly encountered in necropsies of 600 mastomys maintained in a closed colony ...
|
||
|
Furnival I G - - 1970
Clinical examination, thermography, and 70-mm. mammography were performed in 891 patients-414 presented to hospital with symptoms of breast disease and 477 were asymptomatic. Comparison of the diagnostic accuracy of these methods showed that neither thermography nor 70-mm. mammography has a useful place as an isolated screening procedure for breast cancer. ...
|
||
|
Pydipati, Rajesh.
Thesis (M.E.)--University of Florida, 2004.
|
||
|
Hodgkin, Keith
I suggest that many of the common psychoneuroses are behavioural reactions which arise in response to isolation of an individual from his group. This hypothesis is difficult to substantiate by statistical means and no attempt has been made to do so.
|
||
| 1 | ||