Showing 501 - 520 results of 101,892 for search '(( e point decrease ) OR ( 5 ((mm decrease) OR (((nn decrease) OR (a decrease)))) ))', query time: 1.45s Refine Results
  1. 501
  2. 502
  3. 503
  4. 504
  5. 505

    IGFBP-3 decreases vascular tone by activating scavenger receptor-B1. by Yagna P. R. Jarajapu (316562)

    Published 2013
    “…A significant decrease in myogenic tone was observed at 100 (*P<0.02, n = 5) and 300 ng/ml (**P<0.01, n = 5) IGFBP-3. …”
  6. 506
  7. 507
  8. 508
  9. 509
  10. 510
  11. 511
  12. 512
  13. 513
  14. 514
  15. 515

    EphA4 immunostaining is decreased adjacent to injury site in ephrin-A5-Fc treated mice. by Yona Goldshmit (205708)

    Published 2011
    “…<p>Immunohistochemical analysis of (A,B) GFAP, (C–F) EphA4 and (G,H) CSPG expression at 2 weeks after spinal cord hemisection and 2 weeks of ephrin-A5-Fc treatment indicated that there was robust GFAP staining in both treated and control mice (A,B). …”
  16. 516

    Typical fit of V Kα spectrum using only five scaling parameters, yielding two calibration points (V Kα<sub>1</sub> and V Kα<sub>2</sub> which constrain the spectrometer dispersion... by C T Chantler (557430)

    Published 2013
    “…The peak energy of the titanium Kβ spectral profile is found to be 4931.966 ± 0.022 eV prior to instrumental broadening. This 4.5 ppm result decreases the uncertainty over the past literature by a factor of 2.6 and is 2.4 standard deviations from the previous standard. …”
  17. 517

    Thrombin-induced decreased lamellipodia protrusion frequency and actin stress fiber formation. by Jerome W. Breslin (548352)

    Published 2015
    “…Also, in this image a transient opening at a tricellular junction (*) is apparent. …”
  18. 518
  19. 519
  20. 520

    Orthostatic Hypotension and Elevated Resting Heart Rate Predict Low-Energy Fractures in the Population: The Malmö Preventive Project by Viktor Hamrefors (512698)

    Published 2016
    “…</p><p>The median follow-up time from baseline to first incident fracture among the subjects that experienced a low energy fracture was 15.0 years. A 10 mmHg orthostatic decrease in systolic blood pressure at baseline was associated with 5% increased risk of low-energy-fractures (95% confidence interval 1.01–1.10) during follow-up, whereas the resting heart rate predicted low-energy-fractures with an effect size of 8% increased risk per 10 beats-per-minute (1.05–1.12), independently of the orthostatic response. …”