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1 f sea floor, where the flow was locally very erosive.
2 e understood as contrasting accretionary and erosive agents for coastal systems.
3 ic findings in all affected rabbits included erosive and necrotizing enterocolitis with adherent bact
4                                      In both erosive and non-erosive reflux disease, expression level
5 ficient mice was more severe, prolonged, and erosive and was neutrophil dominated, with viral replica
6 es, glaciers have been inferred to be highly erosive, and conditions of glaciation are used to explai
7 factor-transgenic (TNF-Tg) mice that develop erosive arthritis and in wild-type littermates was studi
8 mice, which develop spontaneous inflammatory erosive arthritis beginning at 14-16 wk, were crossed wi
9 r transgenic (TNF-Tg) mice with inflammatory-erosive arthritis display lymphatic drainage deficits, t
10 tors each participate in the pathogenesis of erosive arthritis in K/BxN mice.
11 function during amelioration of inflammatory-erosive arthritis occurs without restoration of alphaSMA
12                      Immunization induced an erosive arthritis of the hind paws.
13 ns may enable these autoantibodies to induce erosive arthritis or glomerulonephritis either by direct
14  susceptible to the development of a chronic erosive arthritis subsequent to mycoplasma infection.
15    We describe a patient with HIM and severe erosive arthritis with prominent nodules in the absence
16  coverage decreases with severe inflammatory-erosive arthritis, and is recovered by anti-TNF therapy
17 yeloid hyperplasia associated with cachexia, erosive arthritis, dermatitis, conjunctivitis, glomerula
18 evere inflammatory phenotype, with cachexia, erosive arthritis, left-sided cardiac valvulitis, myeloi
19          DKK1 has been implicated in causing erosive arthritis, the osteolytic phenotypes of multiple
20      In TNF-Tg mice, a model of inflammatory-erosive arthritis, the popliteal lymph node (PLN) enlarg
21 ave an important role in the pathogenesis of erosive arthritis.
22 peptidoglycan-polysaccharide animal model of erosive arthritis.
23 pontaneously develops glomerulonephritis and erosive arthritis.
24 synovium that later developed into a chronic erosive arthritis.
25 sia, cachexia, dermatitis, autoimmunity, and erosive arthritis.
26 r in which patients suffer from inflammatory-erosive arthritis.
27 estoration with amelioration of inflammatory-erosive arthritis.
28 chexia, myeloid hyperplasia, dermatitis, and erosive arthritis.
29 te joint inflammation and are protected from erosive arthritis.
30 1 and SJL mice developed an inflammatory and erosive arthritis.
31 usions, lymphadenopathy, bone marrow oedema, erosive bone changes and periostitis, and bone and carti
32         Evidence amassed from the CDS highly erosive bounding discontinuities, internal discontinuiti
33 er the influence of different mechanical and erosive challenges.
34 ispectral (MS) image analysis, for assessing erosive change.
35 s of MRIs can be used to detect and quantify erosive changes in RA.
36 py was also done whenever symptoms suggested erosive changes.
37                                              Erosive contact dermatitis is an under-recognized compli
38 e first time quantify the relative long-term erosive contribution of landward cliff retreat, and down
39 "shared epitope" (SE) were not predictive of erosive damage at 2 years in patients with early inflamm
40 t an early stage in patients with RA, before erosive damage has occurred.
41 ombinations showed they reduce synovitis and erosive damage, especially when used with steroids.
42 tions include fluorescein pooling in surface erosive defects, intercellular trapping of fluorescein,
43                Here, we map the deposits and erosive destruction of a giant submarine gravity flow fr
44 ease course (OR 9.78, 95% CI 1.25-76.7), and erosive disease (OR 14.3, 95% CI 3.01-67.9).
45 roximal extent of reflux and the presence of erosive disease and cough reflex sensitivity in unselect
46 e used to evaluate a patient's potential for erosive disease and the efficacy of anti-TNF therapy.
47  1987 criteria or all cases of seropositive, erosive disease as defined by the Rome criteria were ide
48     RANKL genotypes were not associated with erosive disease at baseline or with the yearly progressi
49  at the higher dose) and minimal evidence of erosive disease at study end in the active treatment gro
50  also elevated in the serum of patients with erosive disease compared with patients with nonerosive R
51                           Many patients with erosive disease first develop their erosions >2 years fr
52 The SE is associated with the development of erosive disease in many ethnic groups; however, striking
53 etween patterns of acid exposure in NERD and erosive disease on pH testing.
54 ubsets of ASPs in which both individuals had erosive disease or both carried 2 copies of the shared e
55 e was no association between the presence of erosive disease or rheumatoid factor status and the dose
56 se from forms that proceed to an aggressive, erosive disease requiring intensive immunosuppressive th
57 ppressed the subsequent evolution of chronic erosive disease typified by disabling joint swelling and
58                                              Erosive disease was more frequent in men than in women (
59  tended to occur earlier (47% versus 31% for erosive disease within the first 4 years of RA).
60 cases had seropositive disease, over 60% had erosive disease, and over 40% had subcutaneous nodules.
61 1 gene cluster and IL-4/IL-4 genes influence erosive disease, but their effects are mainly in late RA
62       Age, disease activity, the presence of erosive disease, non-Caucasian race, and smoking were si
63 ) but similar esophageal reflux exposure and erosive disease, together with similar prevalence of ext
64 sents another layer of regulation to control erosive disease.
65 articular onset, a polyarticular course, and erosive disease.
66 plicates angiogenesis in the active phase of erosive disease.
67 may identify patients who have a low risk of erosive disease.
68 h male sex, rheumatoid factor positivity, or erosive disease.
69 s an unreliable indicator of the severity of erosive disease.
70    A further ten studies examined links with erosive disease.
71 st a possible role for this region in severe erosive disease.
72 ontents and leading either to erosive or non-erosive disease.
73 doscopic or radiological evidence of active (erosive) disease anywhere in the gastrointestinal (GI) t
74                            With exclusion of erosive diseases (3/160 or 1.9%) from endoscopy, 16 subj
75                At approximately 17 Ma, steep erosive drainage networks would have flowed across the H
76                    Twenty-four patients with erosive early RA (duration < 3 years) who were receiving
77 rget atoms that are not sputtered away, with erosive effects being essentially irrelevant.
78 ammation, TNF-alpha may fully exert its bone erosive effects by directly promoting the differentiatio
79 me sufficiently integrated and stable to the erosive effects of horizontal gene transfer that true or
80 tion mountain streams are commonly viewed as erosive environments, but they can retain sediment along
81  Eastern Europe, including 248 patients with erosive esophagitis (aged 46.5 16.3 years) and 273 contr
82  are classified as Barrett's esophagus (BE), erosive esophagitis (EE) and non-erosive gastroesophagea
83                                              Erosive esophagitis (EE) is the part of gastroesophageal
84 se population consisted of all patients with erosive esophagitis (International Classification of Dis
85                                       Severe erosive esophagitis after a 2-month course of proton-pum
86         Of 11 patients with heartburn, 6 had erosive esophagitis and 5 had normal-appearing mucosa on
87 ents with normal pH metry, 2 were found with erosive esophagitis and 7 without endoscopic abnormaliti
88                                              Erosive esophagitis and esophageal stricture were associ
89 equently, SSc patients may be complicated by erosive esophagitis and eventually by Barrett's esophagu
90 ession was used to assess the association of erosive esophagitis and extra-esophageal symptoms.
91 d if biopsies are obtained in the setting of erosive esophagitis and if pathology findings suggest LG
92  subjects will have repeated bouts of severe erosive esophagitis and never develop Barrett's esophagu
93 fect of proton pump inhibitors on healing of erosive esophagitis and symptom resolution.
94 sults propose a link between both healing of erosive esophagitis and the slower remission of upper an
95 tion than PPIs, but data on its efficacy for erosive esophagitis are limited.
96 ents > or =50 years of age without ulcers or erosive esophagitis at baseline endoscopy were assigned
97 ompared with patients with erosive GERD (ie, erosive esophagitis detected during preoperative endosco
98                                Patients with erosive esophagitis had a higher prevalence of excessive
99 ageal symptoms is higher among patients with erosive esophagitis in a transitional country characteri
100 mptoms in individuals with and those without erosive esophagitis in Albania.
101            Although the prevalence of severe erosive esophagitis increases with age, the severity of
102     Patients were classified as having GERD (erosive esophagitis or abnormal pH; n = 24), EoE (confir
103        Patients with nonerosive GERD (ie, no erosive esophagitis or Barrett esophagus detected during
104 signi fi cantly lower in patients with GERD (erosive esophagitis or nonerosive but pH-abnormal GERD)
105 ith GERD and acid-related complications (ie, erosive esophagitis or peptic stricture) should take a P
106 e data on the severity of both heartburn and erosive esophagitis pooled data from 5 prospective, rand
107 participants had significantly less frequent erosive esophagitis than white participants (24% vs. 50%
108 sociation between race and GERD symptoms and erosive esophagitis was analyzed in logistic regression
109                                              Erosive esophagitis was found in 50 of 215 participants
110 ressive increase in the prevalence of severe erosive esophagitis was observed with each decade of age
111                                  Adults with erosive esophagitis were randomized to once-daily vonopr
112            In all models, the association of erosive esophagitis with any extra-esophageal symptoms w
113 here was evidence of a strong association of erosive esophagitis with chronic cough (OR = 3.2, 95% CI
114 s found significant associations of BMI with erosive esophagitis, 6 of 7 found significant associatio
115          We evaluated MI in 61 patients with erosive esophagitis, 81 with nonerosive but pH-abnormal
116 cant increase in the risk for GERD symptoms, erosive esophagitis, and esophageal adenocarcinoma.
117 al acid exposure, the presence of endoscopic erosive esophagitis, and hiatal hernia).
118  gastro-intestinal symptoms overlapping with erosive esophagitis, and provides sustained improvement
119 of obesity: gastroesophageal reflux disease, erosive esophagitis, Barrett's esophagus, esophageal ade
120 story of proven GERD (ie, positive pH study, erosive esophagitis, Barrett's esophagus, or esophageal
121 ease, such as those with a history of severe erosive esophagitis, esophageal ulcer, or peptic strictu
122 rmed in the presence of active inflammation (erosive esophagitis, Los Angeles grade C and D).
123 preoperative evaluation, 51% of patients had erosive esophagitis, stricture, or Barrett's metaplasia.
124 nts with endoscopy-positive "heartburn," ie, erosive esophagitis.
125 heartburn reliably indicates the severity of erosive esophagitis.
126 n age, severe heartburn symptoms, and severe erosive esophagitis.
127 der with gastroesophageal reflux disease and erosive esophagitis.
128 long-term management of patients with severe erosive esophagitis.
129 tment strategy for most patients with severe erosive esophagitis.
130 ansoprazole effectively maintains healing of erosive esophagitis.
131 PIs) have been the mainstay of treatment for erosive esophagitis.
132 enefit was seen predominantly in more severe erosive esophagitis.
133 ole in healing and maintenance of healing of erosive esophagitis.
134 ified as nonerosive reflux disease and 17 as erosive esophagitis.
135 sion-dominated erosion regime since the last erosive event because the vertical knickpoints have not
136 tion zones, providing an untapped archive of erosive events in mountainous landscapes.
137 ially alleviated the clinical and histologic erosive features of CIA in mice.
138 of its length and subjected its genes to the erosive forces associated with reduced recombination.
139  into the MSY and subjected its genes to the erosive forces that attend the absence of crossing over.
140 es have been identified for prognosis of the erosive form of RA.
141                             Thirteen chronic erosive gastritis (CEG) patients with typical yellow ton
142 rett's esophagus, esophageal adenocarcinoma, erosive gastritis, gastric cancer, diarrhea, colonic div
143 n: 285 811 patients were included in the non-erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease cohort and 200
144 g suggests that endoscopically confirmed non-erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease does not requi
145                            Patients with non-erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease seem to have a
146 ophageal adenocarcinoma in patients with non-erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease was 11.0/100 0
147                                          Non-erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease was defined by
148                                              Erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease was examined f
149              Among 285 811 patients with non-erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease, 228 developed
150 0 745 patients in the validation cohort with erosive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease.
151 hagus (BE), erosive esophagitis (EE) and non-erosive gastroesophageal reflux disease (NERD).
152       The primary causes can be divided into erosive gastrointestinal disorders, nonerosive gastroint
153 ve GERD (17.1% [461 of 2700]) and those with erosive GERD (17.1% [596 of 3494]).
154 l risk of reflux recurrence as patients with erosive GERD (adjusted HR, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.87-1.11) and
155  endoscopy) were compared with patients with erosive GERD (ie, erosive esophagitis detected during pr
156                         Thus, the absence of erosive GERD detected by an upper endoscopy may not be u
157 ther nonerosive GERD responds less well than erosive GERD to antireflux surgery is unclear.
158 f GERD (GERD, 36.7% [nonerosive GERD, 41.2%; erosive GERD, 30.8%]; Barrett's esophagus, 13.3%; and Ba
159 gly being considered a different entity from erosive GERD, with a more benign disease course but less
160 RD, and 3494 (56.4%) received a diagnosis of erosive GERD.
161 patients with nonerosive GERD and those with erosive GERD.
162 ind that the long profiles of beds of highly erosive glaciers tend towards steady-state angles oppose
163 inct hand OA phenotypes have been described: erosive hand OA (EHOA), nodal hand OA - also known as no
164 OA (EHOA), nodal hand OA - also known as non-erosive hand OA (non-EHOA) - and first carpometacarpal j
165 ents with radiographic rhizarthrosis and non-erosive hOA by introducing the transcriptional factors O
166 nes from patients with rhizarthrosis and non-erosive hOA is reported.
167 r physiologic in vitro conditions that mimic erosive in vivo environments.
168 sed risk, we examined the effects of chronic erosive inflammatory arthritis and GC treatment on bone
169 at accurately demonstrate the progression of erosive inflammatory arthritis in mice.
170 s were used to assess the natural history of erosive inflammatory arthritis.
171  IEC necroptosis, Paneth cell loss and focal erosive inflammatory lesions in the colon.
172     CD11c-Flip-KO mice spontaneously develop erosive, inflammatory arthritis, resembling rheumatoid a
173 creted inflammatory cytokines and induced an erosive, inflammatory arthritis.
174                         We report 7 cases of erosive irritant contact dermatitis due to chlorhexidine
175 ay had a significant reduction in the Larsen erosive joint count (LEJC), and all IL-1RA-treated group
176                                              Erosive joint damage after 2 years was limited and less
177         The primary outcome was radiographic erosive joint damage after 2 years.
178 C-reactive protein and IL-6 levels, and more erosive joint damage.
179 anger signal in driving adaptive immunity in erosive joint disease.
180 etory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) in erosive joint diseases, we cloned, sequenced, and expres
181 rtilages with histological evidence of focal erosive lesions and periarticular inflammation.
182 inical synovitis after receiving K/BxN sera, erosive lesions in the bone still developed.
183 immune disease characterized by blisters and erosive lesions in the oral mucosa.
184 mphoid hyperplasia in 8 patients (57.1%) and erosive lesions such as aphthoid lesions, erosions, and
185 uximab treatment associated cases of gastric erosive lesions.
186  pimecrolimus cream in the treatment of oral erosive lichen planus (OELP).
187 es in this study, 30 cases were diagnosed as erosive lichen planus or lichenoid mucositis; 29 cases w
188  Head imaging revealed a large expansile and erosive mass in the skull base.
189 n subject to corrosion caused by surrounding erosive materials, and the associated rust expansion for
190 uring the most erosive months than the least erosive months (December-February and June-August in the
191 osivity was ~ 4 times higher during the most erosive months than the least erosive months (December-F
192 n exhibited larger primary lesions that were erosive, more satellite lesions, and higher viral loads
193 .7%) showed various unspecific nonerosive or erosive mucosal lesions within the small bowel, resultin
194 signs (erosive: n = 47) or without them (non-erosive: n = 37) as well as 26 patients lacking GERD-spe
195 GERD-related symptoms with endoscopic signs (erosive: n = 47) or without them (non-erosive: n = 37) a
196  of new ulcers in the stomach or duodenum or erosive oesophagitis at 12 weeks after randomisation.
197 lidity reasons, we also analysed people with erosive oesophagitis at endoscopy (200 745 patients, 1 7
198 17 (8.5%; OR 0.05, 0.01-0.40; p=0.0045); and erosive oesophagitis in nine (4.4%) compared with 38 (19
199 nist, in the prevention of peptic ulcers and erosive oesophagitis in patients receiving low-dose aspi
200 evention of gastric and duodenal ulcers, and erosive oesophagitis in patients taking low-dose aspirin
201                   Patients without ulcers or erosive oesophagitis on endoscopy at baseline were rando
202 aliva samples of two subtypes (reticular and erosive) of OLP patients and healthy controls.
203 nkers of Streptococcus comprising species in erosive OLP.
204                The most common findings were erosive or inflammatory changes.
205 ux of stomach contents and leading either to erosive or non-erosive disease.
206 true irrespective of whether the patient had erosive or nonerosive disease.
207 esions like lymphofollicular hyperplasia and erosive or ulcerative lesions have seldom been described
208 iseases present with painful, ulcerative, or erosive oral manifestations.
209  but lacks specificity, and distinction from erosive osteochondritis is often difficult.
210 agnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) demonstrated erosive osteomyelitis of the xiphoid process with enhanc
211 alreticulin-mediated, proarthritogenic, bone erosive pathway in an experimental model of RA.
212                      These indicate an early erosive phase followed by a period of deposition, a resu
213 fferentially diagnose AAE and NAE in the non-erosive phenotype using endoscopic biopsies.
214 e (A20(myel-KO) mice) triggers a spontaneous erosive polyarthritis that resembles rheumatoid arthriti
215 ell wall (SCW)-induced model of inflammatory erosive polyarthritis, endogenous SLPI was unexpectedly
216 ally and monitored the impact on SCW-induced erosive polyarthritis.
217                    We suggest that increased erosive power associated with capture and basin integrat
218 aries raises concerns about the contributing erosive processes and their roles in restraining coastal
219 ltaneous suppression of the inflammatory and erosive processes in the synovium.
220 to identify prognostic markers predictive of erosive progression over 2 years on serial hand/wrist ra
221 modifying antirheumatic drug therapy reduces erosive progression.
222                                              Erosive pustular dermatosis (EPD) is a rare condition th
223                                              Erosive pustular dermatosis of the scalp (EPDS) is an in
224 g mass spectrometry in sera of patients with erosive RA (n = 15) or nonerosive RA (n = 15) and of hea
225 ynovial fluid (SF) from patients with either erosive RA (n = 5) or nonerosive RA (n = 5).
226 hat were elevated in the SF of patients with erosive RA were C-reactive protein (CRP) and 6 members o
227 ligible subjects with active seropositive or erosive RA were randomly allocated into 3 treatment grou
228 on on Treg cells was higher in patients with erosive RA, and the FCRL3 -169C allele was overrepresent
229  allele was overrepresented in patients with erosive RA.
230 ment transport due to less snowmelt and more erosive rainfall.
231 x disease (NERD) compared with patients with erosive reflux disease (ERD) or Barrett's esophagus (BE)
232 wer response rates compared to patients with erosive reflux disease (ERD); pH metry contributes to GE
233 apy for symptom control in patients with non-erosive reflux disease (NERD) after 6 months.
234                            Patients with non erosive reflux disease (NERD) have lower response rates
235 odent models of reflux esophagitis (RE), non-erosive reflux disease (NERD), and sham operated groups.
236 ns are called erosive reflux disease and non-erosive reflux disease (NERD), respectively.
237                  These conditions are called erosive reflux disease and non-erosive reflux disease (N
238                                          Non-erosive reflux disease is the most common phenotype of G
239                      In both erosive and non-erosive reflux disease, expression levels of Occludin an
240 t patients with symptomatic GERD do not have erosive reflux disease.
241                                              Erosive reflux esophagitis caused a large clinical spect
242 sms in IL1 are correlated with severe and/or erosive rheumatoid arthritis (RA), but the implicated al
243 o identify those cases likely to progress to erosive rheumatoid arthritis have yielded some prognosti
244     We describe a 72-year-old white man with erosive rheumatoid arthritis in whom subacute neurologic
245 gle most significant genetic risk factor for erosive rheumatoid arthritis, acts as a signal transduct
246 is, ankylosing spondylitis, and seronegative erosive rheumatoid arthritis.
247  years prior, based on findings of bilateral erosive sacroiliitis at pelvic radiography (Fig 1A) and
248  years prior, based on findings of bilateral erosive sacroiliitis at pelvic radiography and bone scin
249 ones such as the position of the continental erosive shelf break, the distribution of marine terraces
250                          This chytrid causes erosive skin disease and rapid mortality in experimental
251 on of eczematous skin induced severe primary erosive skin lesions, but not in the skin of healthy mic
252 yr(- 1), whereas control plots exhibited net erosive states.
253 k shows that initially well-mixed and highly erosive submarine flows can produce extensive debris flo
254 channel, an asymmetric mounded drift, and an erosive surface.
255                      This led to three major erosive surges (3.8 to 3.0, 2.8 to 1.6, and 1.6 ky cal B
256  arthritis, we find that autoantibody-driven erosive synovitis is critically reliant on the generatio
257 without H. rodentium) induces a rapid-onset, erosive to ulcerative typhlocolitis which impacts the no
258 ere diarrhea and loss of body condition with erosive to ulcerative typhlocolitis within 1 to 3 weeks
259                                 This in situ erosive tooth wear (ETW) study tested enamel 3-dimension
260 ting to dentists with clinically significant erosive tooth wear and increased esophageal acid exposur
261 No longitudinal studies of reflux-associated erosive tooth wear and of reflux characteristics have be
262  In this longitudinal study in patients with erosive tooth wear and oligosymptomatic GERD receiving e
263 significantly associated with progression of erosive tooth wear at follow-up.
264 ic GERD receiving esomeprazole for one year, erosive tooth wear did not progress further in the major
265  60% of patients presenting to dentists with erosive tooth wear have significant gastroesophageal ref
266      At follow-up, no further progression in erosive tooth wear was observed in 53 (74%) of patients.
267                       Predictive factors for erosive tooth wear were assessed by logistic regression.
268 ongitudinal course of GERD and of associated erosive tooth wear, as well as factors predictive of its
269  elucidation of the causal role of reflux in erosive tooth wear.
270             Primary postmortem findings were erosive tracheitis, pleuropneumonia, regional cellulitis
271 sessment, self-reported periodontitis, basic erosive wear examination, and dental caries experience.
272                                              Erosive wear undermines the structural properties of ena
273 ired enamel pellicle (AEP), protects against erosive wear.

 
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