Search results for "Fen"

showing 10 items of 3710 documents

Exposure assessment of fruits contaminated with pesticide residues from Valencia, 2001– 03

2006

A total of 634 samples of oranges, tangerines, peaches, nectarines, khakis and watermelons were collected from an Agricultural Valencia Community Cooperative during the May 2001 to April 2003 campaigns and they were analysed for 15 pesticides among those recommended for pest treatment. A conventional multiresidue analytical procedure based on ethyl acetate extraction was used followed by gas chromatography coupled to a nitrogen phosphorus detector for routine analysis; and mass spectrometry was performed for confirmation. Recovery studies with spiked samples at 0.5 mg kg-1 for each pesticide ranged from 52% for acephate to 87% for fenthion with a standard deviation20%. Limits of quantificat…

AdultAcceptable daily intakeHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisFood ContaminationToxicologyToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundHumansAcephateChromatographyNitrogen–phosphorus detectorFenthionPesticide residuePesticide ResiduesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthEnvironmental ExposureGeneral ChemistryPesticideDietchemistrySpainChemistry (miscellaneous)FruitMalathionMaximum Allowable ConcentrationGas chromatographyFood AnalysisFood ScienceFood Additives and Contaminants
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Plasma granulysin levels and cellular interferon-gamma production correlate with curative host responses in tuberculosis, while plasma interferon-gam…

2007

Contains fulltext : 52707.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) Granulysin is a recently identified cytolytic protein which is expressed by human cytotoxic T-lymphocytes and natural killer (NK)-cells, and has broad antimicrobial and tumoricidal activity. Circulating granulysin levels are associated with T- and NK-cell activity, and may thus reflect protection-associated cellular immune responses. In a case-control study in Indonesia, a highly tuberculosis (TB)-endemic country, we therefore determined plasma granulysin levels in adults with active pulmonary TB before, during, and after TB treatment, both in mild/moderate-TB and advanced-TB patients, and compared these to healthy neighbo…

AdultAntigens Differentiation T-LymphocyteMaleMicrobiology (medical)TuberculosisAdolescentInfectious diseases and international health [NCEBP 13]TuberculosiImmunologyEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayBiologySeverity of Illness IndexMicrobiologyInterferon-gammaImmune systemAntigenImmunitymedicineHumansCytotoxic T cellInterferon gammaPlasma granulysinCellular granulysinCellular IFN-gGranulysinDisease severityTuberculosis PulmonaryAgedImmunity CellularInterferon-gamma productionPoverty-related infectious diseases [N4i 3]Immunotherapy gene therapy and transplantation [UMCN 1.4]Middle Agedmedicine.diseasePathogenesis and modulation of inflammation [N4i 1]Infectious DiseasesCase-Control StudiesPlasma IFN-gImmunologyFemaleMicrobial pathogenesis and host defense [UMCN 4.1]medicine.drugImmunity infection and tissue repair [NCMLS 1]
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Erratum: By promoting cell differentiation, miR-100 sensitizes basal-like breast cancer stem cells to hormonal therapy

2019

Basal-like breast cancer is an aggressive tumor subtype with a poor response to conventional therapies. Tumor formation and relapse are sustained by a cell subset of Breast Cancer Stem Cells (BrCSCs). Here we show that miR-100 inhibits maintenance and expansion of BrCSCs in basal-like cancer through Polo-like kinase1 (Plk1) down-regulation. Moreover, miR-100 favors BrCSC differentiation, converting a basal like phenotype into luminal. It induces the expression of a functional estrogen receptor (ER) and renders basal-like BrCSCs responsive to hormonal therapy. The key role played by miR-100 in breast cancer free-survival is confirmed by the analysis of a cohort of patients' tumors, which sho…

AdultAntineoplastic Agents HormonalTransplantation HeterologousBreast cancer basal-like differentiation miR-100Breast NeoplasmsCell Cycle ProteinsKaplan-Meier EstimateMice SCIDProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesMice Inbred NODCell Line TumorProto-Oncogene ProteinsAnimalsHumansAgedAged 80 and overReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionCorrectionCell DifferentiationMiddle AgedPrognosisImmunohistochemistryGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticMicroRNAsTamoxifenOncologyReceptors EstrogenMCF-7 CellsNeoplastic Stem CellsFemale
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A randomised factorial trial of sequential doxorubicin and CMF vs CMF and chemotherapy alone vs chemotherapy followed by goserelin plus tamoxifen as …

2005

The sequential doxorubicin → CMF (CMF = cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, fluorouracil) regimen has never been compared to CMF in a randomised trial. The role of adding goserelin and tamoxifen after chemotherapy is unclear. In all, 466 premenopausal node-positive patients were randomised to: (a) CMF × 6 cycles (CMF); (b) doxorubicin × 4 cycles followed by CMF × 6 cycles (A → CMF); (c) CMF × 6 cycles followed by goserelin plus tamoxifen × 2 years (CMF → GT); and (d) doxorubicin × 4 cycles followed by CMF × 6 cycles followed by goserelin plus tamoxifen × 2 years (A → CMF → GT). The study used a 2 × 2 factorial experimental design to assess: (1) the effect of the chemotherapy regimens (CMF vs A …

AdultCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyCyclophosphamidemedicine.medical_treatmentUrologyBreast NeoplasmsDisease-Free SurvivalDrug Administration Schedulebreast cancerchemoendocrine treatmentAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsClinical StudiesmedicineAdjuvant therapyHumansDoxorubicinCyclophosphamideanthracyclinesGynecologyChemotherapypremenopausalbusiness.industryGoserelinadjuvant therapyMiddle AgedCombined Modality TherapyTamoxifenRegimenMethotrexateOncologyChemotherapy AdjuvantDoxorubicinFluorouracilLymphatic MetastasisGoserelinFemaleFluorouracilbusinessTamoxifenFollow-Up Studiesmedicine.drugBritish Journal of Cancer
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Rectal Diclofenac administration for prevention of post-Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangio-Pancreatography (ERCP) acute pancreatitis. Randomized prospec…

2019

Introduction. Post-Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangio-Pancreatography pancreatitis (PEP) is a relevant (1-4%) complication of biliopancreatic operative endoscopy. Rectal nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (specifically, 100 mg of diclofenac) have shown promising prophylactic activity in PEP. The aim of our prospective study is to report whether prophylactic oral versus rectal suppository versus intramuscular diclofenac versus placebo are able to reduce the incidence and the severity of ERCP-induced pancreatitis.Materials and Methods. in this randomized, double-blinded, prospective study, 100 patients (49 male, 51 female), similar with regard to indication for ERCP, were enrolled between Janu…

AdultCholangiopancreatography Endoscopic RetrogradeMalePancreatitiDiclofenacPreventionAnti-Inflammatory Agents Non-SteroidalMiddle AgedERCPTreatment OutcomeDouble-Blind MethodPancreatitisAdministration RectalAcute DiseaseHumansFemaleProspective StudiesComplicationLa Clinica terapeutica
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Testing the Cross-Cultural Robustness of the Minority Stress Model in Gay and Bisexual Men

2017

The study tests the cross-cultural robustness of the minority stress model using a most different systems approach. Data from Western European, Eastern European (including Russian), Indian, Philippine, and Thai gay and bisexual men was obtained online. The final sample consisted of N = 90,467 participants who reported their level of satisfaction with life, victimization, felt stigma, and internalized homonegativity, as well as their disclosure status and sociodemographic details. Stepwise linear regressions were conducted on reported levels of satisfaction with life. Higher levels of victimization, felt stigma, and internalized homonegativity predicted lower satisfaction with life in all gr…

AdultCross-Cultural ComparisonMaleAsiaSocial PsychologySexual BehaviorEmotionsSocial Stigma050109 social psychologyEducationGender StudiesSexual and Gender Minorities03 medical and health sciencesHumansCross-cultural0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologyHomosexuality MaleRobustness (economics)Crime VictimsGeneral PsychologyDefense Mechanisms030505 public health05 social sciencesGeneral MedicineCross-cultural studiesMinority stressEuropeEastern europeanWestern europeBisexualityDemographic economics0305 other medical scienceStress PsychologicalJournal of Homosexuality
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Implicit Theories of Child Sexual Exploitation Material Offenders: Cross-Cultural Validation of Interview Findings

2019

Offense-supportive cognitions are thought to result from underlying implicit theories (ITs). As child sexual exploitation material (CSEM) users are a distinct type of sex offender, Bartels and Merdian proposed that CSEM offenders hold five different ITs from those endorsed by contact sex offenders (i.e., Unhappy World, Self as Uncontrollable, Child as Sexual Object, Nature of Harm [CSEM variant], and Self as Collector), linked by an assumption about the Reinforcing Nature of the Internet. This article reports a conceptual content analysis of 23 interviews conducted with CSEM offenders in the United Kingdom and Spain. Support for all CSEM-specific ITs was found across both samples, providing…

AdultCross-Cultural ComparisonPoison controlSuicide preventionPathology and Forensic MedicineInterviews as TopicCognitionArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)EroticaHumansCross-cultural0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildApplied PsychologyImplicit personality theoryInternetConceptualizationSex offender050901 criminology05 social sciencesHuman factors and ergonomicsChild Abuse SexualUnited KingdomHarmSpain0509 other social sciencesPsychological TheoryPsychologySocial psychology050104 developmental & child psychologyInternational Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology
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Activity of the antiestrogenic cajanin stilbene acid towards breast cancer

2014

Antiestrogenic therapy is a mainstay for estrogen receptor (ERα)-positive breast cancer. Due to the development of resistance to established antihormones such as tamoxifen, novel compounds are required. The low abundant cajanin stilbene acid (CSA) recently isolated by us from Pigeon Pea (Cajanus cajan) has structural similarities with estrogen. We analyzed the cytotoxic and anticancer activity of CSA in ERα-positive and -negative human breast cancer cells in vitro, in vivo and in silico. CSA exerts anticancer and antiestrogenic activities towards ERα-positive breast cancer, and it showed cytotoxicity towards tamoxifen-resistant MCF-7 cells, implying that CSA may be active against tamoxifen-…

AdultEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismClinical BiochemistryMice NudeEstrogen receptorBreast NeoplasmsPharmacologyBiochemistryBreast cancerCell Line TumorAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsStilbenesAnimalsHumansMedicineCytotoxic T cellPromoter Regions Geneticskin and connective tissue diseasesCytotoxicityMolecular BiologyNutrition and Dieteticsbusiness.industryEstrogen AntagonistsEstrogen Receptor alphaCancerMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseXenograft Model Antitumor AssaysSalicylatesGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticTamoxifenReceptors EstrogenCancer cellMCF-7 CellsFemalebusinessEstrogen receptor alphaTamoxifenmedicine.drugThe Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
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The role of eating disorders features, psychopathology, and defense mechanisms in the comprehension of orthorexic tendencies

2022

Abstract Purpose Recent studies pointed out the importance to distinguish orthorexia nervosa (ON) from non-problematic forms of interest with healthy eating. This distinction needs to be further explored since it may favor a better comprehension of the relationship between orthorexic behaviors and psychopathology and lead to an improved understanding of the psychological processes implicated in ON. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to investigate the associations between ON and the core features of eating disorders (EDs), psychopathological symptoms and defense mechanisms, by differentiating three groups of individuals: an ON symptoms group, a healthy-eating control group, and a n…

AdultFeeding and Eating DisordersOrthorexia · Eating disorders · Psychopathology · Defense mechanismsYoung AdultPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyCross-Sectional StudiesSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansFeeding BehaviorComprehensionDefense Mechanisms
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Safety and Efficacy of Sorafenib in Patients With Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Consideration of Concomitant Stage of Liver Cirrhosis

2009

GOALS AND BACKGROUND: The multikinase inhibitor sorafenib provides survival benefit for patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and liver cirrhosis (LCI) Child-Pugh A. We report our experiences with sorafenib in advanced HCC, particularly in patients with LCI Child-Pugh B/C, where only limited data are available in regard to safety and efficacy of sorafenib. METHODS: Thirty-four patients with advanced HCC were treated with sorafenib regardless of liver function and prior anticancer therapy. Adverse events (AEs) were graded using Common Toxicity Criteria version 3.0, tumor response was assessed according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors. RESULTS: Fifteen patients…

AdultLiver CirrhosisMaleNiacinamideSorafenibmedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma HepatocellularTime FactorsCirrhosisPyridinesAntineoplastic AgentsKaplan-Meier EstimateRisk AssessmentSeverity of Illness IndexGastroenterologyInternal medicinemedicineCarcinomaHumansProspective StudiesProtein Kinase InhibitorsAgedAged 80 and overbusiness.industryPatient SelectionPhenylurea CompoundsBenzenesulfonatesLiver NeoplasmsGastroenterologyCancerMiddle AgedSorafenibmedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesSurgeryTreatment OutcomeResponse Evaluation Criteria in Solid TumorsHepatocellular carcinomaConcomitantFemaleLiver functionbusinessmedicine.drugJournal of Clinical Gastroenterology
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