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1 tatus (including return to work and previous life style).
2 T alone is sufficient to change reproductive life style.
3 ome and still preserve our modern societies' life style.
4 nsive metabolic adaptations to the epiphytic life style.
5 dults have secondarily adapted to an aquatic life style.
6 casions during evolution, to their parasitic life style.
7 n for a low-nutrient, low metabolic activity life style.
8 y diverged from nonusers in their values and life style.
9 20% of the total number of species with this life-style.
10 ma lipids and cholesterol linked to diet and life-style.
11 th client fish and an exclusively monogamous life-style.
12 at could be related to adoption of a Western life-style.
13 t depends on the host genome, nutrition, and life-style.
14 ed C(1) metabolism and a particle-associated life-style.
15 heir redundancy in an exclusively biotrophic life-style.
16  adaptation of brucellae to an intracellular life-style.
17 phology, venoms, and parasitoid and eusocial life styles.
18 acterial partner's free-living and symbiotic life styles.
19 he transition between planktonic and biofilm life styles.
20 and susceptibility to pathogens of different life styles.
21 neous in terms of metabolism, morphology and life-styles.
22 further delineate the impact of our changing life-styles.
23 nsition between the individual and the group life-styles.
24  in the environment and has several distinct life-styles.
25 ealth education and the promotion of healthy life-styles.
26 mate characteristic, rather than an arboreal life-style adaptation.
27 ce use and its relationship to attributes of life style among college students over a 30-year period.
28 tions of the evolution of various biological life-styles, among them the parasitoid habit.
29 opetramus SG9, revealed a photoheterotrophic life style and a low median isoelectric point (pI) for a
30                              A comprehensive life style and dietary questionnaire was completed by th
31 obesity a result of overeating and sedentary life style and most efforts to treat or prevent weight g
32                                The subsocial life style and wood-feeding capability of Cryptocercus g
33 g organisms and obligatorily linked to their life styles and defined environmental conditions.
34 bjects were also matched in terms of various life-style and anthropometric measures.
35 n help clarify causal relations between both life-style and genetic factors and risks of disease.
36 argely because of population-wide changes in life-style and habits.
37 affect survival and health at advanced ages, life-style and other environmental influences may profou
38                                              Life-style and patient related factors with a known effe
39 etary habits obtained as part of the overall life-style and risk factor assessment, as well as a comp
40 lls, they evolve an MHC class I-independent "life-style" and do not require further stimulation with
41 lex interactions between genetic background, life style, and environmental factors influencing our co
42 y (HRT) in the United States by demographic, life-style, and heart disease risk factors.
43 rlines the role of the synchronicity between life-style-associated metabolic signals and peripheral c
44 invaded when conditions permitted an aerobic life style at the seafloor.
45 terol include hormonal, body composition, or life-style/behavioral changes.
46 que window of opportunity to instill healthy life-style behaviors and promote cardiovascular health.
47 nd environmental factors, including diet and life-style, both contribute to cardiovascular disease, c
48 ave to be caused by overeating and sedentary life-style but may be the result of the "obese" change i
49 termine the switch from a lysogenic to lytic life style, but so far strategies are lacking to selecti
50                                         This life-style change clearly has ramifications for our phys
51 we evaluate how continuous measures, such as life style changes and traditional treatments, affect bo
52 Evidence that aggressive medical therapy and life style changes reduce the risk of stroke in individu
53                                     Although life-style changes are the first line of therapy, they a
54                  Anti-inflammatory drugs and life-style changes to decrease inflammation in cancer pa
55  and demanding treatment regimens, including life-style changes, medications or even dialysis or rena
56 a on their socio-demographic, behavioral and life style characteristics, and diagnostic questions fol
57              These results encourage healthy life style choices and dietary intervention to modify th
58 vealing populations specific for seasons and life-styles (combinations of free-living, particle, or z
59 characterizes their association to aging and life-style conditions, such as smoking and physical acti
60                                    Sedentary life styles coupled with high-calorie diets and unhealth
61                      Metazoan complexity and life-style depend on the bioenergetic potential of mitoc
62  between cases and controls (e.g. related to life style, diet, and medication use) that may affect th
63 ontrolling for socio-demographic, health and life-style differences.
64                              Diet is a major life style factor affecting human health, thus emphasizi
65        In a conservative model adjusting for life style factors and cardiovascular and antidepressant
66 h as periodontitis and arthritis), unhealthy life-style factors (psychosocial stress and sleep distur
67     Mechanistic links shared by T2D, AId and life-style factors such as obesity, perhaps through chro
68 ssure, medication-intake, sociodemographics, life-style factors, somatic/depressive-symptoms and slee
69 2D, do not support an overall confounding by life-style factors.
70 ful insect group, displaying a wide range of life styles from solitary to eusocial.
71        Because of its obligate intracellular life style, genetic manipulation of the pathogen is diff
72 lar neuropil, numbers of olfactory sensilla, life styles, habitat, and phylogenetic affinities.
73                                Intracellular life-style has been adopted by many pathogens as a succe
74    Conversion between the motile and biofilm life-styles has been attributed to increased levels of t
75 ss species varying in their life history and life style; (ii) the decrease coincided with the period
76     This review categorizes the diversity of life-styles in the Phytoseiidae, based primarily on food
77     The data suggest that there are genetic, life-style (including ascertainment), and hormonal facto
78 compasses disparate genera with a variety of life styles, including opportunistic human pathogens (e.
79    Anthropometric measures and self-reported life-style information were collected from 1993 to 1997
80  a dozen glossiphoniid species with a hidden life style inside the mantle cavity of their hosts large
81 ributed mHealth implementation of a low-cost life-style intervention is associated with short-term, r
82 the gut microbiota of humans living a modern life-style is typical of omnivorous primates.
83 tween free-swimming (planktonic) and biofilm life-styles is regulated by the second messenger cyclic
84 d eating out as part of an overall unhealthy life-style, is associated with an increased prevalence,
85 s (helminths), due to modern highly hygienic life styles, likely contributes to this risk.
86 well as for the Ensemble model, and 38 daily life style measures, 14 cardiac risk factors and cardiov
87 away by individual differences in health and life-style measures (HR: 1.03, 95% CI: 1.00-1.07).
88 d by using RSM and predonation counseling on life style modifications postdonation.
89 and strategies for improving compliance with life-style modifications and multiple drug therapies sho
90 pertensive strategies, especially focused on life-style modifications.
91                  The molecular basis of this life-style, obligate biotrophy, remains unknown.
92 ion of drugs and toxins, and by the diet and life style of an individual.
93 y linked to the exceedingly passive obligate life style of M. leprae with a degraded genome and host
94 er a blood meal, an adaptation to the unique life style of mosquitoes.
95 etabolism associated with the hemibiotrophic life style of pathogen.
96 oral hairs as they relate to the specialized life style of the prairie vole.
97 ptional regulators that reflects the diverse life styles of bacteria.
98  study is hampered because of the biotrophic life styles of rust fungi.
99 icrooxic, endosymbiotic, and nitrogen-fixing life styles of the alpha-proteobacterium Bradyrhizobium
100                                          The life styles of the two bacteria are very different - H.
101 hat PrfA has a global role in modulating the life-style of L. monocytogenes.
102 on and is essential for the photoautotrophic life-style of plants.
103 oli reflects the natural, 'feast and famine' life-style of the bacterium, however, different copy num
104                            A bark-associated life style on tree trunks is ancestral for most of the l
105 highly variable and because of their sessile life style, plants are forced to acclimate to them at th
106                     In insects whose derived life styles preclude the detection of airborne odorants,
107 proof-of-concept for mobile health (mHealth) life-style programs targeting physical inactivity and ov
108                                          The life-styles proposed are as follows: Type I, specialized
109 esults for anogenital CIS types suggest that life style related human papilloma virus infections cont
110 nsional school-based intervention to improve life-style-related behaviors.
111 ive of this cohort study was to evaluate the life-style-related determinants, including diet, on athe
112  gut microbiome plays a role in GWI and that life-style risk factors such as an unhealthy diet can ac
113 ated mite for which such a context dependent life-style shift is described.
114 ng regulator HapR, which mimics an infective life style, specifically reduced the inflammatory potent
115 n to that observed for bacteria with complex life-styles, such as Myxococcus xanthus.
116 ide range of taxonomic groups have adopted a life style that involves flower infection.
117 targeting by the host is determined by phage life style, the positions of the targeted protospacer wi
118 he regulatory requirements of its multi-host life style, there is a need to adopt additional means to
119  can switch from a planktonic, free-swimming life-style to a sessile, colonial state, called a biofil
120 dis audaxviator is capable of an independent life-style well suited to long-term isolation from the p
121 roteobacteria and is notable for its complex life-style with social behaviors and relatively large ge

 
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