Search alternatives:
significant progressive » significant progress (Expand Search), significant protective (Expand Search), significant processes (Expand Search)
progressive decrease » progressive decline (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
significant progressive » significant progress (Expand Search), significant protective (Expand Search), significant processes (Expand Search)
progressive decrease » progressive decline (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
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Image1_Association between mental health and male fertility: depression, rather than anxiety, is linked to decreased semen quality.tif
Published 2024“…</p>Results<p>Status of depression was negatively associated with semen quality parameters, whereas no statistically significant association was recognized between anxiety and semen quality except that sperm concentration was decreased by 25.60 (95% CI, 1.226 to 49.965, P=0.040) ×10<sup>6</sup>/ml in moderate to severe anxiety group referring to normal group. …”
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Stratified analysis of the association between urinary cadmium and bone mineral density, by sex.
Published 2025Subjects: -
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Questionnaire description.
Published 2025“…<div><p>Background</p><p>During the last decades, intensive care unit (ICU) mortality rates have significantly decreased but this progress has come with unintended consequences for patients and their caregivers. …”
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Functional and strength parameters.
Published 2025“…Differences between LGMD-R9 and controls, over time, and the relationship between baseline water T1 and water T2 parameters and disease progression (FF, functional and strength parameters) were assessed by linear mixed models and correlation analyses.…”
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Flow chart of research object screening.
Published 2025“…Estradiol exhibited significant non-linear relationship with ALI (P = 0.027), with multiple inflection points suggesting concentration-dependent effects.…”
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Raw data.
Published 2025“…Increased use of opiates in the Emergency Department, elevated total leucocyte count, breath rate, and decreased red blood cell count were not significantly associated with ACS occurrence (p > 0.05). …”