Showing 38,141 - 38,160 results of 100,134 for search '(( 5 ((ppm decrease) OR (a decrease)) ) OR ( 5 ((mean decrease) OR (teer decrease)) ))', query time: 1.79s Refine Results
  1. 38141

    PRISMA flow diagram. by Edward Cole (12541745)

    Published 2023
    “…Five studies demonstrated post-exercise changes in sweat rates and four studies showed decreases in mean skin temperature. …”
  2. 38142

    Participant data. by Edward Cole (12541745)

    Published 2023
    “…Five studies demonstrated post-exercise changes in sweat rates and four studies showed decreases in mean skin temperature. …”
  3. 38143

    A half-century of changes in migratory landbird numbers along coastal Massachusetts by Matthew D. Kamm (7354754)

    Published 2019
    “…Although continent-wide there has been an overall decrease in landbird populations over the past 40 years, we found a variety of patterns in abundance over time. …”
  4. 38144
  5. 38145

    Image1_LIT01-196, a Metabolically Stable Apelin-17 Analog, Normalizes Blood Pressure in Hypertensive DOCA-Salt Rats via a NO Synthase-dependent Mechanism.pdf by Adrien Flahault (2602345)

    Published 2021
    “…LIT01-196 behaves as a potent full agonist for the apelin receptor and has an in vivo half-life in the bloodstream of 28 min after intravenous (i.v.) and 156 min after subcutaneous (s.c.) administrations in conscious normotensive rats. …”
  6. 38146

    Image1_LIT01-196, a Metabolically Stable Apelin-17 Analog, Normalizes Blood Pressure in Hypertensive DOCA-Salt Rats via a NO Synthase-dependent Mechanism.pdf by Adrien Flahault (2602345)

    Published 2021
    “…LIT01-196 behaves as a potent full agonist for the apelin receptor and has an in vivo half-life in the bloodstream of 28 min after intravenous (i.v.) and 156 min after subcutaneous (s.c.) administrations in conscious normotensive rats. …”
  7. 38147

    Image2_LIT01-196, a Metabolically Stable Apelin-17 Analog, Normalizes Blood Pressure in Hypertensive DOCA-Salt Rats via a NO Synthase-dependent Mechanism.pdf by Adrien Flahault (2602345)

    Published 2021
    “…LIT01-196 behaves as a potent full agonist for the apelin receptor and has an in vivo half-life in the bloodstream of 28 min after intravenous (i.v.) and 156 min after subcutaneous (s.c.) administrations in conscious normotensive rats. …”
  8. 38148

    Image2_LIT01-196, a Metabolically Stable Apelin-17 Analog, Normalizes Blood Pressure in Hypertensive DOCA-Salt Rats via a NO Synthase-dependent Mechanism.pdf by Adrien Flahault (2602345)

    Published 2021
    “…LIT01-196 behaves as a potent full agonist for the apelin receptor and has an in vivo half-life in the bloodstream of 28 min after intravenous (i.v.) and 156 min after subcutaneous (s.c.) administrations in conscious normotensive rats. …”
  9. 38149

    A 27-year-old female with an acute cardioembolic infarction fifteen hours after the onset. by Daichi Momosaka (6160418)

    Published 2020
    “…<b>G:</b> MTR<sub>asym</sub> spectra show decreased MTR<sub>asym</sub>(3.5ppm) or APTW signal (%) in the infarct area compared to the CNAWM. mRS, modified Rankin Scale; NIHSS, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; FLAIR, fluid attenuated inversion recovery; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; ROI, region-of-interest; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; APTW, amide proton transfer-weighted; CEST, chemical exchange saturation transfer; CNAWM, contralateral normal-appearing white matter; S<sub>sat</sub>(ppm) and S<sub>0</sub>, the signal intensities obtained with and without selective radiofrequency saturation pulse irradiation, respectively; APT<sub>10</sub>, APT<sub>25</sub>, APT<sub>50</sub>, APT<sub>75</sub>, and APT<sub>90</sub>, correspond to the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles of APTW signal value, respectively.…”
  10. 38150
  11. 38151

    DataSheet_1_Prophylactic treatment of Glycyrrhiza glabra mitigates COVID-19 pathology through inhibition of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the hamster model and NETosis.pdf by Zaigham Abbas Rizvi (6167057)

    Published 2022
    “…Prophylactic treatment with GG showed protection against loss in body weight and a 35%–40% decrease in lung viral load along with reduced lung pathology in the hamster model. …”
  12. 38152
  13. 38153

    Like CASZ1a, CASZ1b suppresses neuroblastoma cell growth. by Zhihui Liu (95891)

    Published 2013
    “…C. Similar to CASZ1a, the induction of CASZ1b by Tet decreased clonogenicity of SY5YtetCASZ1b cells in soft agar (p<0.005). …”
  14. 38154

    Internal Thoracic Impedance - A Useful Method for Expedient Detection and Convenient Monitoring of Pleural Effusion by Gideon Charach (731133)

    Published 2015
    “…Prominent changes were observed in the respiratory rate of the study group: there was a decrease from 31.2±4.0 to 19.5±2.4 ohm (35.2%) compared to no change for the controls, and a mean increase from 83.6±5.3%-92.5±1.6% (13.2%) in O2 saturation compared to 94.2±1.7% for the controls. …”
  15. 38155

    The dataset used in this study. by Seyed Iman Mohammadpour (13977640)

    Published 2023
    “…Besides, the adopted feature importance approach decreases the overall accuracy by only up to 5% in most of the estimated models. …”
  16. 38156

    The selected explanatory variables. by Seyed Iman Mohammadpour (13977640)

    Published 2023
    “…Besides, the adopted feature importance approach decreases the overall accuracy by only up to 5% in most of the estimated models. …”
  17. 38157

    Cavity-Modulated Proton Transfer Reactions by Fabijan Pavošević (2181412)

    Published 2022
    “…Depending on the cavity mode polarization direction, we show that the optical cavity can increase the reaction energy barrier by 10–20% or decrease the reaction barrier by ∼5%. By using first-principles methods, this work establishes strong light-matter coupling as a viable and practical route to alter and catalyze proton transfer reactions.…”
  18. 38158
  19. 38159
  20. 38160

    The effect of acetylcysteine on the prothrombin time and international normalized ratio: a narrative review by Messia Nazar (20635096)

    Published 2025
    “…This increase was dose-dependent and was caused by a decrease in the activity of coagulation factors II, VII, IX and X. …”