Showing 1,981 - 2,000 results of 34,801 for search '(( 5 ((point decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ) OR ( 50 ((teer decrease) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 0.91s Refine Results
  1. 1981
  2. 1982
  3. 1983

    Morpholine antisense oligonucleotide treatment decreases expression of the flow-responsive gene <i>klf2a</i> results in valve dysgenesis. by Julien Vermot (257990)

    Published 2009
    “…The proportions were significantly different at a level of significance α = 0.01. Scale bars indicate 50 µm. …”
  4. 1984
  5. 1985
  6. 1986
  7. 1987
  8. 1988
  9. 1989
  10. 1990
  11. 1991
  12. 1992
  13. 1993
  14. 1994

    Ab Initio Study of the Substituent Effects on the Relative Stability of the <i>E</i> and <i>Z</i> Conformers of Phenyl Esters. Stereoelectronic Effects on the Reactivity of the Car... by Helmi Neuvonen (2643793)

    Published 2005
    “…An excellent correlation with a negative slope was observed for both series between Δ<i>E</i> of the <i>E</i><i>−</i><i>Z</i> equilibrium and the Hammett σ constant. …”
  15. 1995

    Massachusetts Medicaid members that smoked in 2008: Characteristics associated with smoking status in 2014 by Alexis D. Henry (4509955)

    Published 2017
    “…We observed a significant decrease in members reporting smoking “every/some days” of 15.5 percentage points (p < .0001) from 2008 to 2014, and a significant decrease in smokers reporting smoking “more than 10 cigarettes on days smoked” of 16.7 percentage points (p < .0001). …”
  16. 1996

    Phosphorylation as an Effective Tool to Improve Stability and Reduce Toxicity of Antimicrobial Peptides by Zufang Ba (11036420)

    Published 2024
    “…Developing a straightforward and effective strategy to modify antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) is crucial in overcoming the challenges posed by their instability and toxicity. …”
  17. 1997
  18. 1998
  19. 1999

    Advancing the science of NOWS research. by Sarah E. Maylott (14560785)

    Published 2024
    “…It is not known which infants will develop NOWS, therefore, the current hospital standard-of-care dictates a 96-hour observational hold. Understanding which infants will develop NOWS soon after birth could reduce hospital stays for infants who do not develop NOWS and decrease burdens on hospitals and clinicians. …”
  20. 2000

    Protocol measures. by Sarah E. Maylott (14560785)

    Published 2024
    “…It is not known which infants will develop NOWS, therefore, the current hospital standard-of-care dictates a 96-hour observational hold. Understanding which infants will develop NOWS soon after birth could reduce hospital stays for infants who do not develop NOWS and decrease burdens on hospitals and clinicians. …”