Search results for " Urinary"

showing 10 items of 569 documents

Paternity, copulation disturbance and female choice in lekking black grouse

1996

Female copulation behaviour in the black grouse, Tetrao tetrix, was studied by detailed observations of individually marked birds together with DNA fingerprinting analyses for paternity assessment. For each breeding occasion females typically mated only once with one male, and did not mate outside the lek arena. They re-mated with the same or another male usually only if the initial copulation was disturbed and was probably unsuccessful in sperm transfer. The willingness of females to copulate only once with one male suggests that multiple mating with several males incurs a cost that more than outweighs any possible fertility or sperm competition benefits. Attempts by neighbouring males to …

Ecologymedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyFertilityTetraoBiologyBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationSpermLek matingMate choiceAnimal Science and ZoologyMatingSperm competitionreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonAnimal Behaviour
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Labour supply with habit formation

2002

Abstract In a model with habit-forming labour supply we show that standard myopic utility maximisation of a person weakly addicted to a harmful habit is consistent with empirical results on labour supply.

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsLabour supplymedia_common.quotation_subjectEconomicsHabitreproductive and urinary physiologyFinancemedia_commonEconomics Letters
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Revisiting the Duration Dependence in the US Stock Market Cycles

2022

There is a big controversy among both investment professionals and academics regarding how the termination probability of a market state depends on its age. Using more than two centuries of data on the broad US stock market index, we revisit the duration dependence in bull and bear markets. Our results suggest that the duration dependence for both bull and bear markets is a nonlinear function of the state age. It appears that the duration dependence in bear markets is strictly positive. For 93% of the bull markets, the duration dependence is also positive. Only about 7% of the bull markets, those with the longest durations, do not exhibit positive duration dependence. We also compare a few …

Economics and Econometricsanimal structuresurogenital systemanimal diseasesDuration dependenceInvestment (macroeconomics)HazardStock market indexSurvival functionEconometricsStock market cyclesEconomicsGamma distributionVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200reproductive and urinary physiologyhealth care economics and organizationsSSRN Electronic Journal
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Economic evaluation of health services costs during pandemic influenza A (H1N1) pdm09 infection in pregnant and non-pregnant women in Spain (2009)

2016

Background: The healthcare and socio-economic burden resulting from influenza A (H1N1) pdm09 in Spain was considerable. Our aim was to estimate and compare the management (resource utilization) and economic healthcare impact in an at-risk group of unvaccinated pregnant women with an unvaccinated group of non-pregnant woman of childbearing age (15-44 yr old). Methods: We addressed this question with a longitudinal, observational, multicentre study. Inputs were the require-ments in managing both groups of women. Outcome measures were healthcare costs. Direct healthcare (including medical utilisation, prescriptions of antivirals, medication, diagnostic tests, and hospitalisation) costs and ind…

EmbarassadesServeis sanitarisreproductive and urinary physiologyVirus
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Disruption of apical-basal polarity of human embryonic stem cells enhances hematoendothelial differentiation

2007

Abstract During murine development, the formation of tight junctions and acquisition of polarity are associated with allocation of the blastomeres on the outer surface of the embryo to the trophoblast lineage, whereas the absence of polarization directs cells to the inner cell mass. Here, we report the results of ultrastructural analyses that suggest a similar link between polarization and cell fate in human embryos. In contrast, the five human embryonic stem cell (hESC) lines displayed apical-basal, epithelial-type polarity with electron-dense tight junctions, apical microvilli, and asymmetric distribution of organelles. Consistent with these findings, molecules that are components of tigh…

Embryoid bodyBiologyCell fate determinationMiceCell polarityAnimalsHumansInner cell massCells CulturedEmbryonic Stem Cellsreproductive and urinary physiologyembryoid body formationTight junctionMesenchymal stem cellapical-basal polarityCell PolarityCell DifferentiationEpithelial CellsCell Biologyinner cell masshuman embryonic stem cellsEmbryonic stem cellHematopoiesisCell biologyDrug CombinationsIntercellular JunctionsPhenotypeembryonic structuresMolecular Medicinehernatoendothelial differentiationProteoglycansCollagenEndothelium VascularLamininStem cellDevelopmental Biology
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Defining the genomic signature of totipotency and pluripotency during early human development.

2013

The genetic mechanisms governing human pre-implantation embryo development and the in vitro counterparts, human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), still remain incomplete. Previous global genome studies demonstrated that totipotent blastomeres from day-3 human embryos and pluripotent inner cell masses (ICMs) from blastocysts, display unique and differing transcriptomes. Nevertheless, comparative gene expression analysis has revealed that no significant differences exist between hESCs derived from blastomeres versus those obtained from ICMs, suggesting that pluripotent hESCs involve a new developmental progression. To understand early human stages evolution, we developed an undifferentiation netw…

EmbryologyBlastomeresMicroarraysCellular differentiationGene ExpressionCell Fate DeterminationMolecular Cell BiologyGene Regulatory NetworksInduced pluripotent stem cellreproductive and urinary physiologyGeneticsMultidisciplinarySystems BiologyStem CellsQTotipotentRGenomic signatureCell DifferentiationGenomicsCell biologyFunctional GenomicsBlastocyst Inner Cell MassBlastocyst Inner Cell Massembryonic structuresMedicineResearch ArticlePluripotent Stem CellsSystems biologyCell PotencyScienceEmbryonic DevelopmentBiologyMolecular GeneticsGeneticsHumansGene NetworksBiologyEmbryonic Stem CellsGenome HumanGene Expression ProfilingBio-OntologiesComputational BiologyMolecular Sequence AnnotationComparative GenomicsMolecular DevelopmentEmbryonic stem cellSignalingSignaling NetworksGene expression profilingGenome Expression AnalysisTotipotent Stem CellsDevelopmental BiologyPLoS ONE
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A novel model of human implantation: 3D endometrium-like culture system to study attachment of human trophoblast (Jar) cell spheroids.

2011

There is an urgent need to develop optimized experimental models to examine human implantation. These studies aimed to (i) establish a human endometrium-like three-dimensional (3D) culture system, and (ii) examine the attachment of trophoblast-like Jar spher- oids to the culture. In the present work, 3D endometrial cultures were constructed with fibrin-agarose as matrix scaffold, and using epithelial and stromal cells from both human primary cultures and established cell lines. An attachment assay between trophoblast cells and the 3D culture was developed. Epithelial cells (cytokeratin + ) concentrated on top of the matrix forming a monolayer, and stromal cells (vimentin + ) resided within …

Embryologymedicine.medical_specialtyCell typeStromal cellCellCell Culture TechniquesVimentinMatrix (biology)BiologyChorionic GonadotropinModels BiologicalEndometriumInternal medicineCell Line TumorSpheroids CellularGeneticsmedicineCell AdhesionHumansEmbryo ImplantationMolecular Biologyreproductive and urinary physiologyObstetrics and GynecologyTrophoblastCell BiologyEpitheliumCell biologyProlactinTrophoblastsEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive MedicineCell cultureembryonic structuresbiology.proteinFemaleDevelopmental BiologyMolecular human reproduction
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Ecotoxicological studies with the freshwater rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus. Resource competition between rotifers and daphnids under toxic stress

1993

Abstract This study examined the ability of the freshwater rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus to coexist with the large cladoceran Daphnia magna, and the effect of sublethal concentrations of copper on the competition between both species. Preliminary laboratory experiments showed that large Daphnia (> 1.2 mm) can kill and rapidly exclude the rotifer B. calyciflorus in mixed-species cultures. Brachionus populations were suppressed by Daphnia both through exploitative competition for shared, limited food resources and through mechanical interference. At a food concentration of 1 X 105 cells/ml of Nannochloris oculata, competition caused high mortality rates and decreased fertility in the rotife…

Environmental EngineeringbiologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectfungiDaphnia magnaZoologyRotiferInterspecific competitionBrachionusbiology.organism_classificationPollutionDaphniaCompetition (biology)CladoceraBrachionus calyciflorusEnvironmental ChemistryWaste Management and Disposalreproductive and urinary physiologymedia_commonScience of The Total Environment
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Effect of the insecticide methylparathion on filtration and ingestion rates of Brachionus calyciflorus and Daphnia magna

1993

The freshwater rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus and the cladocera Daphnia magna were exposed to sublethal levels of methylparathion to determine the effect on filtration and ingestion rates. The experiments were performed using the unicellular algae, Nannochloris oculata in a density of 5 × 105 cell/ml. Prior to feeding experiments, preliminary acute toxicity tests were carried out to determine 24-h LC50 values for both species, these values indicated that Daphnia magna was more sensitive to methylparathion acute exposure than Brachionus calyciflorus was. Rates of filtration and ingestion declined with increasing methylparathion concentrations after an exposure of 5 h to this toxicant. The e…

Environmental EngineeringbiologyfungiDaphnia magnaRotiferbiology.organism_classificationPollutionAcute toxicityToxicologyAnimal scienceCladoceraBrachionus calyciflorusEnvironmental ChemistryEcotoxicologyIngestionWaste Management and Disposalreproductive and urinary physiologyEC50Science of The Total Environment
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VIRULENCE FACTORS AND ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE OF ESCHERICHIA COLI ST131 IN COMMUNITY-ONSET HEALTHCARE-ASSOCIATED INFECTIONS IN SICILY, ITALY

2017

Escherichia coli ST131 is an emerging resistant agent recently called “superbug” in England. This strain is responsible of community-acquired urinary tract infections and nowadays showing increasing resistance to antibiotics like fluoroquinolones and cephalosporins. Survey of virulent bacterial clone is relevant to control its spreading in community. We aim to assess the circulation of resistant clones Escherichia coli ST131 outside of the hospital to prompt control of outbreak in our geographical area. We selected 105 E. coli resistant isolates from community-acquired urinary infections and performed a multiplex PCR to evaluate if they belonged to the ST131 type. We investigated their set …

Escherichia coli urinary tract infections antibiotics fluoroquinolones cephalosporins
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