コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ay, progressive microcephaly, and failure to thrive).
2 n, cholelithiasis, short stature, failure to thrive).
3 izure activity or amelioration of failure to thrive.
4 rms upon which a new, bio-based industry can thrive.
5 ease, skeletal abnormalities, and failure to thrive.
6 pace for transformed cells to survive and to thrive.
7 formations to survive and, in most cases, to thrive.
8 one in which children and their families can thrive.
9 which EOMA cells evade oxidant toxicity and thrive.
10 Most patients failed to thrive.
11 ate settlements that enable both cultures to thrive.
12 onatal-onset watery diarrhoea and failure to thrive.
13 s, interstitial lung disease, and failure to thrive.
14 enteropathy, hypoalbuminemia, and failure to thrive.
15 thargy; chronic FPIES can lead to failure to thrive.
16 ive behavior is fundamental for a society to thrive.
17 d mechanisms of tolerance that allow them to thrive.
18 s must produce the same metabolic outputs to thrive.
19 te immune response, thus helping pathogen to thrive.
20 otected and have the opportunity to grow and thrive.
21 ing health care organizations to succeed and thrive.
22 aining environments, in which diverse talent thrives.
23 in evolution to increase infant survival and thriving.
24 used chiefly on vaccines, and vaccinology is thriving.
25 tual Framework of All Children Surviving and Thriving.
26 is needed to ensure equity for all children thriving.
28 ea hydrothermal vents, microbial communities thrive across geochemical gradients above, at, and below
30 l symptoms of CS patients include failure to thrive and a severe neuropathology characterized by micr
31 mature aging in which young children fail to thrive and adolescents die from myocardial infarction or
33 strointestinal disorders, such as failure to thrive and delayed gastric emptying, together accounted
36 ; one presented in childhood with failure to thrive and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and the other wa
37 esents in the newborn period with failure to thrive and metabolic crisis leading to coma or even deat
39 o ensure both that children who survive also thrive and that recommendations promote equity, with no
40 ing the conditions at which intertidal reefs thrive and the sharp boundaries where reefs fail, which
41 ful transition and suggest a clear path to a thriving and vibrant relationship between humans and the
43 ions, gastrointestinal illnesses, failure to thrive, and hospital readmission in the first year of li
46 ) mice survive post-weaning, show failure to thrive, and show increased methylmalonic acid, propionyl
50 emical carbon dioxide reduction has become a thriving area of research with the aim of converting ele
51 er microorganisms) depends on its ability to thrive as a biofilm, a closely packed community of cells
55 orting observations that Prochlorococcus LLI thrive at higher irradiances than other LL taxa, the res
57 ctron acceptor making them ideally suited to thrive at the boundaries of OMZs where they experience f
59 nthes, Rotifera, Annelida and Arthropoda are thriving at 1.4 km depths in palaeometeoric fissure wate
63 , gastrointestinal illnesses, and failure to thrive between IBD cases and matched controls as well as
65 educe the Incidence of Vascular Events (HPS2-THRIVE), but its net effects on health and healthcare co
66 levation of glycine, seizures and failure to thrive, but glycine reduction often fails to confer neur
67 ilic dermatitis/panniculitis, and failure to thrive, but without obvious primary immunodeficiency.
68 n they endure the host response but can also thrive by exploiting tissue-destructive inflammation, wh
71 clean and abundant water is the keystone of thriving communities, increasing demand and volatile cli
72 llow the entire energy transfer process in a thriving culture of the purple bacteria, Rhodobacter sph
75 usly, some viruses, including herpesviruses, thrive despite the induction of ROS, suggesting that ROS
76 ring a UTI, urease-negative E. coli bacteria thrive, despite the comparative nutrient limitation in u
77 stems may have allowed the deep biosphere to thrive, despite violent phases during Earth's history su
78 an ancient lineage that has diversified and thrived, despite lacking many otherwise highly conserved
79 interplay of regulating factors, and reveals thriving diazotrophic communities in coastal waters with
80 bited global developmental delay, failure to thrive, dilated cardiomyopathy and epilepsy, ultimately
84 Mice lacking Lpcat3 in the intestine fail to thrive during weaning and exhibit enterocyte lipid accum
87 such as bamboo allow feeding specialists to thrive, even a moderate change in seasonality may outstr
88 ical-research called ergodic theory that has thrived ever since, and we discuss some of recent develo
90 sorder, developmental regression, failure-to-thrive, exercise intolerance/fatigue) was associated wit
93 which allows subsets of cells to survive and thrive following changes in environmental conditions.
96 Elevated sweat chloride levels, failure to thrive (FTT), and lung disease are characteristic featur
98 syndrome (BRS), characterized by failure to thrive, global developmental delay, feeding problems, hy
99 ents during infancy, resulting in failure to thrive, hepatomegaly, and hepatic failure, and an averag
100 t that cooperation is particularly likely to thrive if people join forces to curb free riding and pun
101 dinarily diverse, sponge-dominated community thriving immediately after the Hirnantian extinction in
102 y onset multisystem disorder with failure to thrive, immunodeficiency and neurological symptoms.
118 icrobes are able to manipulate, survive, and thrive in complex multispecies communities has expanded
124 acute diarrheal disease cholera, is able to thrive in diverse habitats such as natural water bodies
125 actin permits many Gram-negative bacteria to thrive in environments where low soluble iron concentrat
126 Archaea are renowned for their ability to thrive in extreme environments, although they can be fou
130 Species in the archaeal order Sulfolobales thrive in hot acid and exhibit remarkable metabolic dive
131 hese diminutive and yet ubiquitous organisms thrive in hypersaline habitats that they share with halo
132 ever more accurate and dynamic robots, which thrive in industrial automation, and will probably conti
135 loit different prey types enables species to thrive in more distinct environments and therefore exhib
136 any free-living and endosymbiotic microalgae thrive in N-poor and N-fluctuating environments, giving
142 tolerance in halophytic grasses, plants that thrive in salt conditions, may be an effective approach
143 at the strategies employed by methanogens to thrive in salt-saturating conditions are not limited to
147 the evolution of social strategies needed to thrive in stochastic environments, strategies that in ou
148 role in terrestrial environments where they thrive in symbiotic associations with plants and animals
151 nctionally uniform cohort of taxa adapted to thrive in the anoxic gut and disperse between anoxic pat
154 Few species of reptant decapod crustaceans thrive in the cold-stenothermal waters of the Southern O
156 responses that allow organisms to adapt and thrive in the face of diverse challenges, including thos
157 is physiologically important for E. coli to thrive in the gallbladder and upper intestinal tract, wh
158 estinal (GI) microbiota is highly adapted to thrive in the GI environment and performs key functions
160 hypoxia and high temperatures, were able to thrive in the immediate aftermath of the extinction.
163 e solute explains how Trichodesmium spp. can thrive in the marine system at varying salinities and pr
165 n an oxygen atmosphere demands an ability to thrive in the presence of reactive oxygen species (ROS).
166 honey bees are adapted to tolerate and even thrive in the presence of toxic compounds that occur nat
169 How complex ecosystems (termed anchialine) thrive in this globally distributed, cryptic environment
174 e thermoregulatory system allowed mammals to thrive in variable environmental conditions and occupy a
175 mutualistic gut bacteria with the ability to thrive in various niches, including those influenced by
176 ght circumstances in which top predators can thrive in warmer environments and contribute to our know
177 ant hepatocyte progenitor cells appeared and thrived in a complex cellular and cytokine milieu until
180 lla pneumophila is a bacterial pathogen that thrives in alveolar macrophages, causing a severe pneumo
181 most abundant desert mosses in the world and thrives in an extreme environment with multiple but limi
183 ent of the severe diarrheal disease cholera, thrives in both marine environments and the human host.
185 iant kelp, a coastal foundation species that thrives in cold, nutrient-rich waters and is considered
187 th West Hot Springs, SWHS) of Magadi tilapia thrives in fast-flowing hotsprings with daytime highs of
188 rom the Dead Sea in 1975, Haloferax volcanii thrives in high salt environments and has emerged as an
189 Mountains and a known indicator species that thrives in large and well-protected blocks of old growth
192 icellular green alga Chlamydomonas sp. ICE-L thrives in polar sea ice, where it tolerates extreme low
196 a globally important group of cyanobacteria, thrives in various light niches in part due to its varie
199 l viruses have evolved to infect hosts often thriving in extreme conditions such as high temperatures
202 -conserved DNA repair machineries, organisms thriving in extreme environments are expected to have de
203 re remarkable examples of life's resilience, thriving in hot springs at boiling temperatures, in brin
206 wth advantage over a range of other bacteria thriving in the same ecological niches, the soil and pla
211 y was to determine the effect of the Alive & Thrive initiative on exclusive breastfeeding in Boucle d
216 t, pontocerebellar abnormalities, failure to thrive, liver dysfunction, lower extremity edema and dys
217 nts with PYCR2 mutations included failure to thrive, microcephaly, craniofacial dysmorphism, progress
219 erebrovascular accident (n = 80), failure to thrive (n = 71), other central nervous system disorder (
222 evere neurodevelopmental defects, failure to thrive, ocular abnormalities, and defects in urogenital
223 l inflammation, food allergy, and failure to thrive, often necessitating nutritional supplementation
228 e was magnified for fast-growing tumors that thrive on long periods of unhindered growth without chem
231 nutrients by symbionts enables consumers to thrive on resources that might otherwise be insufficient
232 plants and have the demonstrated ability to thrive on wastewater rich in dissolved organic compounds
240 y in a patient who presented with failure to thrive, persistent EBV viremia and hepatitis, pneumocyst
246 LS is characterized by hypotonia, failure to thrive, reduced body weight, intellectual disability, an
249 ed on the plausible evolution lines for this thriving scientific field, as well as the main practical
250 eatures of these patients include failure to thrive, short stature, feeding difficulties, development
251 ects with baseline BP >140/90 mm Hg (n=168), THRIVES showed a significant mean SBP (diastolic BP) dec
252 agnetic order by ultrashort laser pulses has thrived since it was observed that such pulses can be us
254 isruption might link to demographic rates in thriving species is an important perspective in quantify
255 zed stroke trial in Africa to test whether a THRIVES (Tailored Hospital-based Risk reduction to Imped
258 he "soil") for cancer cells (the "seeds") to thrive; these changes include increased inflammatory mon
260 ated individuals with ichthyosis, failure to thrive, thrombocytopenia, photophobia, and progressive h
264 athological research, proteomics researchers thrive to examine detailed proteome dynamics using cruci
265 s, and potential applications and has been a thriving topic in both fundamental science and applicati
266 enhances the expression of protumoral genes, thrives tumor malignancy, and leads to the emergence of
268 chosis, severe nail dystrophy and failure to thrive, two heterozygous mutations in ABCA12 (c.2956C>T,
269 chosis, severe nail dystrophy and failure to thrive, two heterozygous mutations in ABCA12 (c.2956C>T,
270 ilize diverse strategies that enable them to thrive under adverse conditions while simultaneously inh
273 30 exist in widely different bacteria, which thrive under environments with large fluctuations in tem
274 s indicate that mHAO allows methanotrophs to thrive under high ammonia concentrations in natural and
278 e) from eight Acropora millepora genets that thrived under or responded poorly to various stressors.
279 rvation suggests, in general, that organisms thriving under high-pressure conditions in the deep sea,
282 erence in SBP reduction from baseline in the THRIVES versus control group (2.32 versus 2.01 mm Hg, P=
283 ized by severe hypercalcemia with failure to thrive, vomiting, dehydration, and nephrocalcinosis.
286 g power parity index) during 4 years in HPS2-THRIVE were evaluated using estimates of the impact of s
287 CANCE STATEMENT Embryonic inhibitory neurons thrive when transplanted into postnatal brains, migratin
290 eceiving immediate drug influx may sometimes thrive, while identical populations exposed to delayed d
291 rgans on a chip, model organisms continue to thrive with a combination of powerful genetic tools, rap
292 ine waters with low to moderate salinity and thrive with elevated sea surface temperature (SST).
295 f the densest microbial ecosystems in nature thrive within the intestines of humans and other animals
296 e bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses that thrive within these communities engage in extensive cell
297 infection-driven inflammatory bone erosion, thrives within a highly inflamed milieu and disseminates