Showing 1 - 20 results of 7,198 for search '(((( a ((non decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ) OR ( a large decrease ))) OR ( i marked decrease ))', query time: 0.61s Refine Results
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    <b>The loss of insulin-positive cell clusters precedes the decrease of islet frequency and beta cell area in type 1 diabetes</b> by Denise M. Drotar (21679539)

    Published 2025
    “…Insulin-positive (INS+) single cells (≤10µm), cell clusters (>10 to <35µm), small- and medium-sized islets (35-100µm and 100-200µm) were significantly lost at type 1 diabetes onset, while large INS+ islets (>200µm) were preserved. Moreover, changes in endocrine composition also occurred in mAAb+ donors, including a significant decrease in the INS+ islet fraction. …”
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    Survival of soft-shell clams with MarBTN compared to control clams. by Rachael M. Giersch (22331947)

    Published 2025
    “…(C) A sub-analysis of low-positive clams in which MarBTN progressed and did not regress (n = 9, dark red line), with survival starting at the time the clam was detected with >10% cancer, compared with their paired control clams starting at the same date (blue line), shows a significant decrease in time-to death. “+” marks the dates at which two negative control animals were culled before natural death (these events were censored in the survival analysis).…”
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    MarBTN-specific eDNA detection in each clam that was followed for MarBTN in hemolymph and eDNA. by Rachael M. Giersch (22331947)

    Published 2025
    “…Asterisk marks one off-scale eDNA point for FFM-23H7 (1,100 copies/ml at week 14).…”
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    S1 Raw images - by Dequan Wang (6007007)

    Published 2024
    Subjects:
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    The introduction of mutualisms into assembled communities increases their connectance and complexity while decreasing their richness. by Gui Araujo (22170819)

    Published 2025
    “…When they stop being introduced in further assembly events (i.e. introduced species do not carry any mutualistic interactions), their proportion slowly decreases with successive invasions. (B) Even though higher proportions of mutualism promote higher richness, introducing this type of interaction into already assembled large communities promotes a sudden drop in richness, while stopping mutualism promotes a slight boost in richness increase. …”
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