Showing 15,961 - 15,980 results of 24,638 for search '(( e point decrease ) OR ( 100 ((ng decrease) OR (((we decrease) OR (a decrease)))) ))', query time: 0.91s Refine Results
  1. 15961

    Modulation of Physiologic Parameters in Molted Isa Brown Laying-Hens by Glutamine + Glutamic Acid Supplementation by W Morales (6099083)

    Published 2018
    “…This study evaluated morphometric parameters of the small intestine and gonadotropin transcript levels in Isa Brown laying hens supplemented with glutamine + glutamic acid (Aminogut®) during a second production cycle. Molting was induced and groups of 100 hens each, were supplemented with 0, 0.8, 1.6 or 2.4% Aminogut® in their diet. …”
  2. 15962

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  3. 15963

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  4. 15964

    Specific induction of FABP4 in neovessels during OIR. by Magali Saint-Geniez (269693)

    Published 2014
    “…(C) Quantification of circulating FABP4 demonstrated a significant decrease of serum FABP4 levels in OIR P17 WT mice compared to control room air (RA). …”
  5. 15965

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  6. 15966

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  7. 15967

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  8. 15968

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  9. 15969

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  10. 15970

    <i>In Vivo</i> Genotoxicity Assessment of Titanium Dioxide Nanoparticles by <i>Allium cepa</i> Root Tip Assay at High Exposure Concentrations by Sunandan Pakrashi (407947)

    Published 2014
    “…A dose dependant decrease in the mitotic index (69 to 21) and an increase in the number of distinctive chromosomal aberrations were observed. …”
  11. 15971

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  12. 15972

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  13. 15973

    Treatment of pFTY720 in vivo and in vitro reduces MOG reactive splenocyte-induced demyelination isolated from MOG-immunised mice. by Adam J. Pritchard (575041)

    Published 2014
    “…There was a significant decrease of MBP staining in slices co-cultured with vehicle treated MOG reactive splenocytes compared to control slices (*p<0.05), which was reduced by pFTY720 treatment; One-way ANOVA and Newman-Keuls post-hoc test. …”
  14. 15974

    Reversing and Nonreversing Heat Capacity of Poly(lactic acid) in the Glass Transition Region by TMDSC by M. Pyda (2660185)

    Published 2005
    “…The melting is largely irreversible, but a 100% reversing fraction is observed at low temperatures from 375 to 420 K, which becomes small inside the major melting peak at about 440 K. …”
  15. 15975

    EVA model yields realistic first percept durations. by Quynh-Anh Nguyen (847240)

    Published 2020
    “…The error bars indicate 95% CI around the mean and are obtained from statistical bootstrapping (see <a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008152#sec023" target="_blank">Methods</a>). …”
  16. 15976

    Optimization of the acid treatment of yacon for the inactivation of polyphenoloxidase with maintenance of the functional properties by Nara Menezes Vieira (4831122)

    Published 2018
    “…The treatment selected by the experimental design (2.4% of citric acid for 540 seconds) resulted in a 15% loss of the FOS contents. However, the final product presented 6.84 g FOS/100 g, higher than the minimum amount required by the relevant legislation (2.5 g FOS/portion of product) for a food to claim a functional property, making the technological process proposed in the present work feasible.…”
  17. 15977

    Image_1_Non-antibiotic antimicrobial polydopamine surface coating to prevent stable biofilm formation on satellite telemetry tags used in cetacean conservation applications.tiff by Ariana Smies (14021868)

    Published 2022
    “…To prevent the formation of antibiotic-resistant pathogens, a polydopamine surface coating that, when exposed to oxygen, releases low doses (~40-100µM) of hydrogen peroxide over a prolonged period (>24 hours) can be used to replace current antibiotic coatings used in the field. …”
  18. 15978

    Equilibrium unfolding studies of refolded hVDAC-2 using GdnHCl. by Svetlana Rajkumar Maurya (516309)

    Published 2014
    “…Solid lines denote fits to a two-state equation, except in the case of 80 mM and 100 mM experiments, wherein a sigmoidal fit was used to illustrate the trend in the dataset. …”
  19. 15979

    Image_4_Non-antibiotic antimicrobial polydopamine surface coating to prevent stable biofilm formation on satellite telemetry tags used in cetacean conservation applications.tiff by Ariana Smies (14021868)

    Published 2022
    “…To prevent the formation of antibiotic-resistant pathogens, a polydopamine surface coating that, when exposed to oxygen, releases low doses (~40-100µM) of hydrogen peroxide over a prolonged period (>24 hours) can be used to replace current antibiotic coatings used in the field. …”
  20. 15980

    <i>In vivo</i> inhibition of ADAM15 activity reduces tumor growth. by Guadalupe Lorenzatti Hiles (2547727)

    Published 2016
    “…Subcutaneous inoculation of shA15UC6 cells (n = 10) in SCID mice led to decreased tumor weight compared to ctlA15UC6 control cells (n = 10) (<i>bottom</i>). …”