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1 vival and reduces the severity of 'carcinoid crises'.
2 lf-reported pain or acute, painful episodes (crises).
3 s diseases that need to be addressed in such crises.
4 operate with and care for one another during crises.
5 orns cause repeated, often lethal, metabolic crises.
6 rvention for acute sickle cell vasoocclusive crises.
7 lities imposed by this crisis and any future crises.
8 paredness and response to infectious disease crises.
9 y for deaths that were due to acute diabetic crises.
10 rwise wet intervals can cause serious social crises.
11 ing outbreaks of hepatitis E in humanitarian crises.
12 d contains exemplars of extreme biodiversity crises.
13  patients hospitalized with sickle cell pain crises.
14 lter the pathophysiology of sickle cell pain crises.
15 s formation can result in significant health crises.
16 ytic anemia and episodic vaso-occlusive pain crises.
17  cooking and a potential way to address both crises.
18 t enables survival and reduces risk of acute crises.
19 complex human behavior that has led to these crises.
20 rovement in the management of operating-room crises.
21 describe the risk propagation process during crises.
22 ns that do not fit the context of protracted crises.
23  a contributing role in numerous past biotic crises.
24 ique constraints to engagement in protracted crises.
25 f outcomes from vaso-occlusive and hemolytic crises.
26 o improve interpersonal communication during crises.
27 oints are mapped to occurrences of financial crises.
28 obesity have emerged as global public health crises.
29  agility to respond rapidly to public health crises.
30 ne of the world's worst ongoing humanitarian crises.
31 fied dramatically between the Early Triassic crises.
32 he treatment of infections and public health crises.
33 ated body temperatures prevailing in febrile crises.
34 paration of patients and families for future crises.
35 ing metabolic acidemia during their episodic crises.
36 f metabolism with metabolic and neurological crises.
37 re and its cause promptly to prevent medical crises.
38 iveness to address an emerging public health crises.
39 key role in the pathogenesis of hypertensive crises.
40 in treatment and resolution of hyperglycemic crises.
41 e, monitor, and prevent future lead in water crises.
42 rams show period doubling route to chaos and crises.
43 to sickle cell disease, and rates of painful crises.
44 times in his career and during international crises.
45 urred in either group, including sickle cell crises.
46 tors to patients can precipitate sickle cell crises.
47 a is characterized by periodic vasoocclusive crises.
48 a is characterized by painful vaso-occlusive crises.
49 disease patients vulnerable to vasoocclusive crises.
50 ions for patients with uncomplicated painful crises.
51 eloping countries will exacerbate local food crises.
52 ic protein quality control mechanisms during crises.
53 ere measured both during and between painful crises.
54 othelial cells at the onset of acute painful crises.
55 mit the duration, severity, and frequency of crises.
56 diversity and social and economic inequality crises.
57 anisms of selective extinction during biotic crises.
58 e COVID-19 pandemic and future public health crises.
59 ry with recovery of hepatic function between crises.
60  allocated for diabetes care in humanitarian crises.
61  have largely been neglected in humanitarian crises.
62 emolytic anemia and iterative vaso-occlusive crises.
63 ease the suffering of people caught in acute crises.
64  one of the most urgent global public health crises.
65 ered to children with frequent vasoocclusive crises.
66  protected against failures or environmental crises.
67  LKB1 loss for tumor cells to survive energy crises.
68  metabolic plasticity in dealing with energy crises.
69 elivery of diabetes care during humanitarian crises.
70 ood rheology in precipitating vaso-occlusive crises.
71  humanitarian public health interventions in crises.
72 ence on health interventions in humanitarian crises.
73  themselves are relatively unaffected by the crises.
74  vaso-occlusion and sickle cell-related pain crises.
75 ublic health information and epidemiology in crises.
76 ater and East Chicago, Indiana, lead in soil crises.
77 it may increase the social cost of financial crises.
78 ies in other vertebrates during major biotic crises.
79 agnostic tools for confronting global health crises.
80 se was reported in the rate of mental health crises (0.39 percentage points (95% confidence interval
81 ), CP2 13%, accelerated phase 17%, and blast crises 6%.
82 io, 4.7; 95% CI, 4.0 to 5.5), acute diabetic crises (8% of all deaths among participants who had prev
83 imate roles of patients' families in medical crises, a persistent tendency to equate families with tr
84 current biodiversity crisis relative to past crises-a task greatly complicated by the need to extrapo
85 al climate change will also exacerbate these crises, accentuating the importance of bringing strength
86 iable phenotype characterized by severe pain crises, acute clinical events, and early mortality.
87 utic interventions in pulmonary hypertensive crises after cardiac surgery and during acute lung injur
88 ustained solutions to these and other health crises among vulnerable populations.
89     Vaso-occlusion is central to the painful crises and acute and chronic organ damage in sickle cell
90 the frequency and severity of vaso-occlusive crises and acute chest syndrome episodes.
91 ondrial pyruvate import prevent bioenergetic crises and allow LLPCs to persist.
92            This article describes protracted crises and argues that they are sufficiently different t
93  the management of intracranial hypertension crises and as a measure to prevent or reverse acute brai
94 following risk factors: SCD, numbers of pain crises and blood transfusions before delivery, delivery
95 nical findings of SRD, aside from oculogyric crises and diurnal fluctuation, are nonspecific and mimi
96 ported, and includes intermittent oculogyric crises and limb dystonia, generalized athetosis, and imp
97 educe the frequency of intracranial pressure crises and mortality rate.
98 ividuals presenting with recurrent metabolic crises and muscle weakness.
99 rent vasoocclusive episodes, leading to pain crises and organ damage, is still a therapeutic challeng
100 perfect storm for a new era of environmental crises and potentially, new diseases.
101 ates of housing problems, loss of confidant, crises and problems getting along with individuals in th
102  on the basis of synchronicities of societal crises and proxy-based climate events.
103 rucial to the improvement of outcomes during crises and the availability to future emergencies of les
104 xygenation, and is characterized by vascular crises and tissue damage due to the obstruction of small
105         To address devastating environmental crises and to improve human well-being, China has been i
106 -globin chains) without recurrence of sickle crises and with correction of the biologic hallmarks of
107 l climatic changes long provoked subsistence crises and, occasionally, civilizational collapses among
108 n of polymers in the lungs, in resolution of crises and/or in minimizing gelation-induced cellular da
109 t, specific end-of-life syndromes/palliative crises, and development of communication skills for trus
110 al hypotonia, dystonia, weakness, oculogyric crises, and diurnal fluctuation of symptoms with sleep b
111 py number alterations often occur in mitotic crises, and lead to simultaneous gains of chromosomal se
112 ms in the face of political unrest, economic crises, and natural disasters was important.
113 ed the incidences of malaria, vaso-occlusive crises, and serious adverse events.
114 s, health behavior change, life stresses and crises, and stress-related physical symptoms.
115  stroke, splenic and renal dysfunction, pain crises, and susceptibility to bacterial infections.
116 use varied and independently predicted pain, crises, and utilization.
117  hospitalized, the times to first and second crises, annual rates of uncomplicated crises (defined as
118 ) boundaries demonstrating that these biotic crises are both associated with rapid change from an ini
119                            Because financial crises are characterized by dangerous rare events that o
120                                These rifting crises are rarely observed in thick lithosphere during t
121                               Vaso-occlusive crises are the main acute complication in sickle cell di
122             Acute services for mental health crises are very important to service users and their sup
123  agents, or are we continuing to act only as crises arise?
124        Patients may experience acute painful crises as well as chronic pain.
125 nment favourable for moral and public health crises, as evident in the separation of children from th
126 with sickle cell disease suffer from painful crises associated with disseminated vaso-occlusions, inc
127 ful in the prevention and treatment of acute crises associated with excessive excitation or depolariz
128  promise for the treatment of hyperammonemic crises-associated disorders.
129 , increase the risk of further global health crises because the emergence of novel infectious disease
130     However, whether HRV are detected during crises because upper respiratory infections often accomp
131 ow levels of diversity by the Early Triassic crises; because global mass extinctions affect all marin
132  data in 30-minute epochs of time to predict crises between 15 and 360 minutes in the future.
133 -endemic areas and locations of humanitarian crises, but no clear consensus exists.
134 t with clinically apparent acute sickle cell crises, but these milder forms can provide a unique view
135 s, Western Europe responded to environmental crises by innovation and intensification; such moderniza
136 sis, may alleviate global warming and energy crises by removing excess CO2 from the atmosphere and co
137 sure are known to precipitate vaso-occlusive crises by still unclear mechanisms.
138                      But many other types of crises can also arise that labs may have to weather duri
139 orld's most challenging environmental health crises can be addressed by adapting proven response prot
140 eather events, or weather-related events and crises can challenge societal resilience, but can also i
141                                      Medical crises cannot be predicted in detail, making most prior
142                                              Crises caused by armed conflict, forced population displ
143 iduals with infancy-onset episodic metabolic crises characterized by encephalopathy, hypoglycemia, rh
144 in includes 3 types: acute recurrent painful crises, chronic pain syndromes, and neuropathic pain.
145 cides where mental health problems, personal crises, coercion, fear of an approaching enemy, or hidde
146  are not associated with climatic and biotic crises comparable to LIPs emitted through cratonic litho
147 - to fourfold in patients with hyperglycemic crises compared with control subjects, and they returned
148 -1 and prostaglandin E2 were elevated during crises compared with healthy African-American controls.
149 hy controls, and it was increased further in crises compared with steady-state.
150 second crises, annual rates of uncomplicated crises (defined as crises other than the acute chest syn
151 y in how sensitive mortality was to economic crises, depending partly on differences in social protec
152                  The 50% reduction in sickle crises documented in the Multicenter Study of Hydroxyure
153 e-income countries, urbanisation, and health crises due to disease outbreaks, extreme weather, and co
154                         Intermittent painful crises due to vasoocclusion are the major clinical manif
155 r adults with 3 or more severe vasoocclusive crises during any 12-month period, with SCD pain or chro
156  retarded and suffer frequent hyperammonemic crises during intercurrent illness or other catabolic st
157 dministrations face any number of unexpected crises during their tenure, and global pandemics are amo
158                               Operating-room crises (e.g., cardiac arrest and massive hemorrhage) are
159                 How we react to humanitarian crises, epidemics, and other tragic events involving the
160  environmental preconditions for subsistence crises experienced in Western Europe between 1109 and 11
161  refocus the world's attention on the health crises facing many developing nations.
162 tress (insecurity, environmental or economic crises, famine), with breakdown accompanied or followed
163 nce abuse problems; medical problems; recent crises; financial, job, and legal problems; intimate par
164 h is activated when MEFs undergo replicative crises following culture ex vivo.
165 o cynocephalus) experiencing acute hemolytic crises following experimental stem cell transplantation
166 nt hospitalization for severe vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 consecutive months.
167 t is characterized by painful vaso-occlusive crises, for which there are few treatment options.
168 etwork analysis can efficiently discriminate crises from periods of financial stability, where standa
169 RETATION: Despite global and regional health crises, global life expectancy has increased continuousl
170                             Global financial crises have led to the understanding that classical econ
171 y decisions about how to respond to economic crises have pronounced and unintended effects on public
172                           Infectious disease crises have substantial economic impact.
173 hat checklists for use during operating-room crises have the potential to improve surgical care.
174 alistic output dynamics: high output with no crises; high output with increased volatility and deep,
175 d pressure lability with severe hypertensive crises, hypotensive episodes, and orthostatic hypotensio
176 ch as history of recurrent childhood febrile crises in 2 patients, mild ataxia in 1, and renal failur
177 s indicates a critical role for these biotic crises in coupling taxonomic and functional diversity.
178 d is characterized by painful vaso-occlusive crises in deep tissues.
179 in the midst of a growing response to health crises in developing countries, which is focused on mobi
180 provide evidence that the major biodiversity crises in Earth's history do not necessarily implicate a
181                                          The crises in Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria have resulted i
182 timately seems to escalate health and social crises in Europe.
183                                              Crises in financial markets affect humans worldwide.
184 rish Famine was one of the worst subsistence crises in history, it was foremost a social disaster ind
185  during acute sickling events (vasoocclusive crises in humans or hypoxia/reoxygenation injury in mice
186  may result in life-threatening hypertensive crises in humans.
187  the occurrence of acute vaso-occlusive pain crises in individuals with SCT.
188 reased occurrence of clinical vaso-occlusive crises in individuals with sickle cell disease who have
189 s among populations affected by humanitarian crises in low-income and middle-income countries, and to
190 intracranial hypertension and tissue hypoxia crises in patients with severe traumatic brain injury.
191 posure to high altitude worsens symptoms and crises in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD).
192 Hydroxyurea reduces the incidence of painful crises in patients with sickle cell disease and has rece
193 use for chronic anemia or uncomplicated pain crises in patients with sickle cell disease; (3) do not
194 ve time-critical feats, ranging from mapping crises in real time, to organizing mass rallies, to cond
195 ich have been associated with vaso-occlusive crises in SCD.
196                                              Crises in science concern not only methods, statistics,
197  hypothesized to contribute to vasoocclusive crises in sickle cell anemia are increased sickle red bl
198 wall, thereby contributing to vaso-occlusive crises in sickle cell disease.
199 yet critical, is central to combating health crises in some of the world's poorest countries and for
200                    Major European population crises in the 14th and 15th centuries associated with re
201 ced mitochondrial metabolic and bioenergetic crises in the rat stomach, indicated by compromised fatt
202 ission for patients undergoing mental health crises in the UK.
203                         Recent water quality crises in the United States, and recognition of the heal
204    In between projects, there are short-term crises in trying to keep the system operational, a fact
205 val [CI], 0.34 to 0.54), vaso-occlusive pain crises (incidence rate ratio, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.34 to 0.56
206 catheter encrustation and avoid the clinical crises induced by catheter blockage.
207   Patients often suffer from anemia, painful crises, infections, strokes, and cardiopulmonary complic
208 ng inflammatory state in SCD between painful crises involving neutrophil activation and an abnormalit
209 ddle-income countries that are vulnerable to crises is also crucial.
210  to decrease the frequency of vaso-occlusive crises is completely defined only in 2 textbooks.
211  emergencies of lessons learned from earlier crises is the regular dissemination of the results achie
212      A perennial concern during "malpractice crises" is that liability costs will drive physicians in
213 e credit growth, the main cause of financial crises, is reflected in the undercapitalization of the f
214  and complexity of responses to humanitarian crises, it is important to develop a stronger evidence b
215  use these structures for prediction of the "crises" known to arise in each application of interest.
216 ermining systemic stability and making large crises more likely.
217 upt changes in the market, such as financial crises, more rapidly than methods based on past volatili
218 hest syndrome (n = 5), and recurrent painful crises (n = 5).
219 mpact of catastrophic events (e.g., economic crises, natural disasters, and terrorism) by not taking
220 has caused global public health and economic crises, necessitating rapid development of vaccines and
221 igate the adverse health impacts of economic crises need to be better understood and implemented.
222  neither coincided with any major biological crises nor with the advent of potential competitors.
223 of emergency room or hospital admissions for crises, number of blood transfusions, hydroxyurea therap
224                                Many of these crises occur in areas with a substantial tuberculosis bu
225  out of seven of the subjects and oculogyric crises occurred from an early stage also in six out of t
226 e participants reported that if one of these crises occurred while they were undergoing an operation,
227 nderlying hypothesis is that the interacting crises of agriculture, health, and infrastructure in rur
228 ed and has substantial activity in the blast crises of CML and in Ph-positive ALL.
229 vascular risks is not known in hyperglycemic crises of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) and nonketotic hyp
230              The developing world faces dual crises of escalating energy demand and lack of urban san
231 economic vulnerability to infectious disease crises of individual countries and regions.
232                    Response to environmental crises of the last millennium varied greatly according t
233 eating acute painful episodes (vasoocclusive crises) of sickle cell disease (SCD).
234 ed to report DIS symptoms attributed to life crises or medical conditions.
235  in red blood cell rigidity, anemia, painful crises, organ infarctions, and reduced life expectancy.
236 al rates of uncomplicated crises (defined as crises other than the acute chest syndrome, hepatic sequ
237 rreversible MAOIs cause serious hypertensive crises owing to peripheral accumulation of tyramine, but
238  On the basis of lessons learned from recent crises, particularly the Syrian conflict and the Ebola e
239  >200 cm/s (n = 2), >/=3 vaso-occlusive pain crises per year (n = 12), or >/=2 acute chest syndrome e
240             The median rate of uncomplicated crises per year was 1.08 with high-dose crizanlizumab, a
241                           The median rate of crises per year was 1.63 with high-dose crizanlizumab ve
242 th mitochondrial cardiomyopathy to metabolic crises precipitated by stresses.
243                                 Humanitarian crises present unique challenges to rigorous and effecti
244    The current extinction and climate change crises pressure us to predict population dynamics with e
245 dy state and 6 during painful vaso-occlusive crises (pVOC).
246          Research for Health in Humanitarian Crises (R2HC) Programme.
247                                              Crises reflect the consequences of disturbed skeletal mu
248 al population, and even the recent financial crises: Renewable-energy industries evidently suffer mor
249 nometric framework that recognizes financial crises represent left tail events for the economy, we es
250                                 Hypertensive crises result from acute elevations in blood pressure.
251 ress were evaluated with the Antonovsky Life Crises Scale and the Elderly Care Research Center Recent
252 tory were evaluated with the Antonovsky Life Crises Scale and the Trauma History Questionnaire, PTSD
253 e, leading to the development of sickle cell crises (SCCs).
254  skill, and behavioral responses to surgical crises should also be quantified.
255 otential therapeutic benefits of IVIG in SCD crises should be evaluated in a clinical trial.
256                Motivated by recent financial crises, significant research efforts have been put into
257 which was found to decrease the frequency of crises significantly, decrease the incidence of acute ch
258 in large armed conflict and natural disaster crises since 2010: we show that information was availabl
259 through which the economic and public health crises sparked by COVID-19 might increase food insecurit
260    Widespread health challenges and pandemic crises such as SARS-CoV-2 create circumstances under whi
261 targeting mental health during public health crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic should consider the
262 ppressed host populations, and public health crises such as the recent Ebola outbreak underscore the
263 ing cyanobacteria can lead to drinking water crises, such as the one experienced by the city of Toled
264                         During global health crises, such as the recent H1N1 pandemic, the mass media
265         These shared patterns in both biotic crises suggest that mass extinctions have predictable in
266 ractices: preventing near-term costly health crises, supporting patient self-care, maximizing effecti
267  those who had been hospitalized for adrenal crises than in those who had not.
268  more severe, with more frequent respiratory crises than non-MuSK myasthenia gravis.
269 antly lower rate of sickle cell-related pain crises than placebo and was associated with a low incide
270 on the microvasculature in acute sickle-cell crises that are independent of the drug's fetal hemoglob
271      It reviews some of the key humanitarian crises that broke new ground in terms of the technologie
272 ecommend a holistic response to humanitarian crises that includes education, screening, treatment, an
273 bit acetylcholinesterase causing cholinergic crises that lead to seizures and death, while survivors
274 se networks are responsible for hypertensive crises that occur in response to ordinarily innocuous st
275 of the tracers track the major socioeconomic crises that occurred in Eastern Europe during the second
276 erapeutic intervention for acute sickle cell crises that should be further evaluated in a clinical tr
277 ntal perturbations associated with these two crises. The new floating chronology established for the
278 ed motor ability and abolition of oculogyric crises, there was no obvious change in cognitive functio
279 further reduced during painful vasoocclusive crises to 34% +/- 9% and 25% +/- 3% of control for GM-CS
280  public health interventions in humanitarian crises to identify key research gaps.
281 age lifespans as low as 2 y during mortality crises to more than 87 y for Japanese women today.
282 olysis- and infection-induced vaso-occlusive crises to TLR4 signaling.
283 hy MCU-deficient mice are spared from energy crises under physiological conditions.
284    Further, ACS and acute vasoccclusive pain crises (VOC) have overlapping features, which causes dia
285                  Treatment of vaso-occlusive crises (VOC) or events in sickle cell disease (SCD) rema
286    A unique feature of SCD is vaso-occlusive crises (VOCs) characterized by episodic, recurrent, and
287 (H/R) stress, mimicking acute vaso-occlusive crises (VOCs), increased bone turnover, osteoclast activ
288 s with severe SCD (at least 3 vaso-occlusive crises [VOCs] per year) were 18.5 +/- 1.2 pg/mL (n = 9)
289                 The median number of painful crises was 44% lower than in the placebo group.
290 ta, which include results on many more blast crises, we obtained evidence that the driving mechanism
291 ion, were vulnerable to global environmental crises, which characteristically intensified background
292 ng whether or not vaso-occlusive sickle cell crises will occur.
293 n predict the onset of intracranial pressure crises with 30-minute advance warning with an area under
294 he start of partial brain tissue oxygenation crises with 30-minute advanced warning with an area unde
295  the annual rate of sickle cell-related pain crises with high-dose crizanlizumab versus placebo.
296                       Two classes had recent crises with relationship problems; one of these classes
297 asopressors has caused maternal hypertensive crises with serious adverse outcome.
298  anthozoans follow mass extinctions and reef crises, with sea anemones and proteinaceous corals filli
299                                              Crises without utilization were reported on 12.7% of day
300 efinement of tools and procedures, resolving crises would also benefit from a deeper understanding of

 
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