Search alternatives:
significant larger » significantly larger (Expand Search), significant barrier (Expand Search), significant dangers (Expand Search)
largest decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
larger decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
significant larger » significantly larger (Expand Search), significant barrier (Expand Search), significant dangers (Expand Search)
largest decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
larger decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
-
461
Osteogenic Potential and Long-Term Enzymatic Biodegradation of PHB-based Scaffolds with Composite Magnetic Nanofillers in a Magnetic Field
Published 2024“…Six-month biodegradation caused a reduction in surface potential (1.5-fold) and in a vertical piezoresponse (3.5-fold) of the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>–GO scaffold because of a decrease in the PHB β-phase content. <i>In vitro</i> assays in the absence of an MF showed a significantly more pronounced mesenchymal stem cell proliferation on composite magnetic scaffolds compared to the neat scaffold, whereas in an MF (68 mT, 0.67 Hz), cell proliferation was not statistically significantly different when all the studied scaffolds were compared. …”
-
462
Balance test results.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
463
Mechanism analysis results.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
464
Endogenous test results.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
465
Heterogeneity analysis results.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
466
Robustness test results.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
467
Baseline results of the impact of RLM on HWSW.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
468
The influencing factors of RLM.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
469
Variable definitions and basic statistics.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
470
Average and marginal effects of RLM on HWSW.
Published 2025“…Specifically, with every 1% increase in RLM, the likelihood of rural residents’ HWSW will decrease by 3.5%. This effect remains significant after a series of robustness checks. …”
-
471
Workflow for selecting IV and MR analysis.
Published 2024“…The results indicate that vitamin D levels are not significantly causally related to PD risk at the genetic level. …”
-
472
Neutrophil Superoxide anion production, Heat map for gene expression from neutrophils of CGD patients, and PCA plot for genome-wide gene expression.
Published 2025“…Heat map</b> showing changes for all significant genes between off IFN-γ and 10-12 hours after the 1st and 4th dose (50 µg/m<sup>2</sup>) of the cytokine given on a routine schedule noted in Methods. …”
-
473
-
474
-
475
Model diagnostics for old death events.
Published 2025“…Results from the dual-pollutants model demonstrated that the effect of PM on the risk of RD mortality remained significant and slightly increased in magnitude. Moreover, composite pollutants exhibited a higher risk effect, reaching its peak after one week; however, there was a decrease in single-day cumulative effects as more pollutant types were included. …”
-
476
Model diagnostics for adult death events.
Published 2025“…Results from the dual-pollutants model demonstrated that the effect of PM on the risk of RD mortality remained significant and slightly increased in magnitude. Moreover, composite pollutants exhibited a higher risk effect, reaching its peak after one week; however, there was a decrease in single-day cumulative effects as more pollutant types were included. …”
-
477
Model diagnostics for child death events.
Published 2025“…Results from the dual-pollutants model demonstrated that the effect of PM on the risk of RD mortality remained significant and slightly increased in magnitude. Moreover, composite pollutants exhibited a higher risk effect, reaching its peak after one week; however, there was a decrease in single-day cumulative effects as more pollutant types were included. …”
-
478
Model diagnostics for all death events.
Published 2025“…Results from the dual-pollutants model demonstrated that the effect of PM on the risk of RD mortality remained significant and slightly increased in magnitude. Moreover, composite pollutants exhibited a higher risk effect, reaching its peak after one week; however, there was a decrease in single-day cumulative effects as more pollutant types were included. …”
-
479
Model diagnostics for female death events.
Published 2025“…Results from the dual-pollutants model demonstrated that the effect of PM on the risk of RD mortality remained significant and slightly increased in magnitude. Moreover, composite pollutants exhibited a higher risk effect, reaching its peak after one week; however, there was a decrease in single-day cumulative effects as more pollutant types were included. …”
-
480
Model diagnostics for male death events.
Published 2025“…Results from the dual-pollutants model demonstrated that the effect of PM on the risk of RD mortality remained significant and slightly increased in magnitude. Moreover, composite pollutants exhibited a higher risk effect, reaching its peak after one week; however, there was a decrease in single-day cumulative effects as more pollutant types were included. …”