Showing 1,981 - 2,000 results of 32,204 for search '(( 50 ((nn decrease) OR (((a decrease) OR (mean decrease)))) ) OR ( a step decrease ))', query time: 1.12s Refine Results
  1. 1981
  2. 1982
  3. 1983

    Early surface PSA-NCAM reduction induced by glutamate exposure. by María Fernanda Podestá (639243)

    Published 2014
    “…(B) Quantification of PSA-NCAM immunoreactive area showed decreased levels at neuronal surface 3 h after glutamate exposure, which remained low for the rest of the studied period (3–6 h). …”
  4. 1984
  5. 1985

    Time-course of changes induced on NCAM and SYN synaptic patterns and levels by glutamate exposure. by María Fernanda Podestá (639243)

    Published 2014
    “…<p>Hippocampal neurons in culture (DIV 12–13) were briefly exposed to 5 µM glutamate and evaluated 1, 3, 6 and 12 h later. (A) Microphotographs of hippocampal neurons in culture doubled stained for NCAM and SYN. …”
  6. 1986

    GNE-781, A Highly Advanced Potent and Selective Bromodomain Inhibitor of Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate Response Element Binding Protein, Binding Protein (CBP) by F. Anthony Romero (2452198)

    Published 2017
    “…Compound <b>19</b> displays antitumor activity in an AML tumor model and was also shown to decrease Foxp3 transcript levels in a dose dependent manner.…”
  7. 1987
  8. 1988
  9. 1989
  10. 1990
  11. 1991
  12. 1992

    Glutamate exposure reduces MAP-2 immunostaining and induces changes in synaptic markers and cell adhesion molecule NCAM in the absence of neuronal death. by María Fernanda Podestá (639243)

    Published 2014
    “…PSA-NCAM immunoreactive area drastically decreased. Results are expressed as mean values (±SEM) of 20-30 neurons or 10 microscope fields (280,000 µm<sup>2</sup>/FOV) per experimental condition. …”
  13. 1993
  14. 1994
  15. 1995
  16. 1996
  17. 1997
  18. 1998
  19. 1999
  20. 2000

    Table_1_Decreased Risk in the Pancreatic Cancer With History of Hay Fever: A Meta-Analysis.doc by Guannan Wang (2209297)

    Published 2020
    “…</p><p>Results: We included 8 population-based case–control studies involving 10,454 participants from 1986 to 2014. A history of hay fever was associated with a decreased risk of pancreatic cancer (OR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.50–0.64, P < 0.00001) through fixed effect model.…”