Search alternatives:
large decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search), large increases (Expand Search), large degree (Expand Search)
i values » _ values (Expand Search)
a large » _ large (Expand Search)
i large » _ large (Expand Search), via large (Expand Search), i larvae (Expand Search)
large decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search), large increases (Expand Search), large degree (Expand Search)
i values » _ values (Expand Search)
a large » _ large (Expand Search)
i large » _ large (Expand Search), via large (Expand Search), i larvae (Expand Search)
-
161
Metformin lotion decreases TGF-β1 levels in the wounded skin of rats after 10 days of wound healing.
Published 2024Subjects: -
162
-
163
-
164
-
165
-
166
-
167
-
168
Temporal trends in large carnivore attacks on humans in different regions of the world.
Published 2023“…<p>(<b>A</b>) The number of attacks shows a nonlinear increase over the years, as evidenced by fitting the general additive mixed model of the number of attacks-1 as a function of the smoothing factor “year.” …”
-
169
-
170
-
171
-
172
-
173
AUC of different variables to predict 1 year MACCE and mortality.
Published 2022Subjects: “…independent predictive value…”
-
174
-
175
-
176
-
177
-
178
Restoring large-scale brain networks in PTSD and related disorders: a proposal for neuroscientifically-informed treatment interventions
Published 2023“…<p>Three intrinsic connectivity networks in the brain, namely the central executive, salience, and default mode networks, have been identified as crucial to the understanding of higher cognitive functioning, and the functioning of these networks has been suggested to be impaired in psychopathology, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).</p> <p>1) To describe three main large-scale networks of the human brain; 2) to discuss the functioning of these neural networks in PTSD and related symptoms; and 3) to offer hypotheses for neuroscientifically-informed interventions based on treating the abnormalities observed in these neural networks in PTSD and related disorders.…”
-
179
-
180