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1 nd tolerance requires a residual functioning white cell.
2 onversely, 152 were more highly expressed in white cells.
3 imately 10(6) times more efficiently than do white cells.
4 ive hypoglycemia and depletion of peripheral white cells.
5 ow which opaque cells irreversibly switch to white cells.
6 vels and provides survival advantages to the white cells.
7 cantly higher levels in opaque cells than in white cells.
8 othrombin time; and numbers of platelets and white cells.
9 ing by opaque cells and biofilm formation by white cells.
10 and adhesion (-0.45; p<0.01), and markers of white-cell (-0.51; p<0.01), platelet (-0.61; p<0.001), a
14 iver biopsy is unsuitable or unavailable the white cell and platelet counts can be used to determine
16 these acute illnesses tend to follow a joint white cell and platelet trajectory that can be reduced t
17 s of magnitude more efficiently than control white cells and at a frequency approaching that of opaqu
20 hastic nature of switching by beginning with white cells and monitoring the activation of Wor1, a mas
22 e bottlenecks in pheromone MAPK signaling in white cells and that alleviation of these bottlenecks en
23 HIF-1alpha but also depends on PPARgamma in white cells and the PPARgamma cofactors PGC-1alpha and P
25 ure red cells, and myeloid/lymphoid/compound white cells) and 49 haemostasis traits (including clotti
26 c variants for association with 36 red cell, white cell, and platelet properties in 173,480 European-
27 plays a critical role in the development of white cells, and abnormal expression of PU.1 can lead to
28 ent rises in genetically modified red cells, white cells, and platelets in both animals, with minimal
30 and rare structural variants with red cell-, white cell-, and platelet-related quantitative traits an
31 led with mepacrine (marker for platelets and white cells), anti-hTF1(Alexa.568) (marker for tissue fa
32 , "white" and "opaque." In Candida albicans, white cells are essentially sterile, whereas opaque cell
33 These data suggest that some allostimulatory white cells are filter adherent, whereas others escape f
35 pheromones by undergoing conjugation, while white cells are induced by pheromones to form sexual bio
36 ating-competent form of the species, whereas white cells are thought to be essentially "sterile".
39 DA or its related compounds are recruited by white cells as a signaling molecule(s) to up-regulate st
40 ucoreduction is necessary for the removal of white-cell-associated TSE infectivity from blood; howeve
42 f majority white cell biofilms, and majority white cell biofilms facilitate minority opaque cell chem
43 increase two-fold the thickness of majority white cell biofilms, and majority white cell biofilms fa
44 te over 1,000 times more efficiently than do white cells, but less efficiently than do opaque cells.
52 pressure, decreased deformability of red and white cells, constricted arterioles, circulating obstruc
54 ed at a level higher in opaque cells than in white cells; conversely, 152 were more highly expressed
55 d glucose >150 mg/dL (8.2 mmol/L), admission white cell count >14,300 cells/mm3 (14.3 x 10(9) cells/L
56 ate >90/minute, respiratory rate >20/minute, white cell count <4 x 10(9)/L or >/= 20 x 10(9)/L, album
57 o, the S. typhi vaccination caused a rise in white cell count (11.1 +/- 0.5 x10(9)/l vs. 7.9 +/- 0.8
59 raised platelets (3.48, 3.35 to 3.62), total white cell count (3.01, 2.89 to 3.14), and C reactive pr
60 (median 9 years vs 5 years), and had a lower white cell count (median 3.9 vs 12.4) compared with chil
61 C-reactive protein (n = 2), albumin (n = 2), white cell count (n = 3), neutrophils (n = 2), and plate
64 rticipants with early ART initiation had CSF white cell count (WCC) >/=5/microL at day 14 (58% vs 40%
65 ts with culture-negative meningitis with CSF white cell count (WCC) above 20 cells per muL were inclu
68 sedimentation rate (ESR), hemoglobin, total white cell count (WCC), estimated glomerular filtration
69 analysis adjusted for age, sex, haemoglobin, white cell count (WCC), platelet count, creatinine, and
70 wice the upper limit of normal (2N) or more, white cell count 150 x 10(9)/L or more, abnormal chromos
71 inine, haemoglobin, potassium, sodium, urea, white cell count and an index NEWS undertaken within +/-
72 d with steroid withdrawal were reductions in white cell count and haemoglobin and increases in plasma
74 aminotransferase (ALT), blood pressure, and white cell count and lower HDL cholesterol compared with
77 model identified age, NEWS, albumin, sodium, white cell count and urea as significant (p<0.001) predi
78 n modeling defined a minimal model including white cell count at diagnosis, pretreatment cytogenetics
79 elet count and hematocrit in addition to the white cell count during the first 3 months of therapy wi
82 he prognostic significance of the presenting white cell count is weaker and the rate of decline in mi
83 arge were body mass index less than 28 kg/m, white cell count less than 15,000/mL, C-reactive protein
84 ormal value, <8.0 mg/L [76.2 nmol/L]), and a white cell count of 7 x 10(9)/L (normal range, [4-11] x
85 of C-reactive protein (CRP), fibrinogen, and white cell count to components of IRS in the nondiabetic
86 was consistent with meningitis or if the CSF white cell count was >100 cells/mm(3) (>50% neutrophils)
90 ate analysis with cytogenetic category, age, white cell count, and French-American-British subtype de
95 type, and Ho-Tr was independent of sex, age, white cell count, and T-cell status among Ph-negative pa
96 CRLF2-d was not associated with age, sex, or white cell count, but IGH@-CRLF2 patients were older tha
98 n activator antigen, C-reactive protein, and white cell count, even after adjustment for possible con
99 s, LDL cholesterol, HbA(1c) (A1C), increased white cell count, ever having smoked, and previous retin
100 were older, had higher admission anion-gap, white cell count, hemoglobin (hb), neutrophil/lymphocyte
101 and symptoms together with laboratory tests (white cell count, neutrophil count and C-reactive protei
104 aboratory data including CD4 cell count, CSF white cell count, protein, glucose, and quantitative cry
106 ic utility of quantifying the synovial fluid white cell count, with two recent systematic reviews rea
110 olytic-uremic syndrome were a higher initial white-cell count (relative risk, 1.3; 95 percent confide
112 e analysis that was adjusted for the initial white-cell count and the day of illness on which stool w
113 dverse event in the entire cohort included a white-cell count of 200,000 per cubic millimeter or high
114 that fever, a virus-specific rash, and a CSF white-cell count of 5/microL or more were independent pr
116 tive protein, and fibrinogen levels, and the white-cell count were measured at base line, along with
121 Multivariate analysis incorporating age, white-cell count, and treatment parameters showed that s
122 ong patients with AML, independently of age, white-cell count, induction dose, and post-remission the
123 to age, neutrophil JAK2 V617F allele burden, white-cell count, platelet count, or clonal dominance.
125 specific effects on mortality and neutrophil/white cell counts (rho = 0.48), C-reactive-protein (rho
126 ducing the time of return to normalcy of the white cell counts after chemotherapy in patients with ac
127 patients present at diagnosis with increased white cell counts and hepatosplenomegaly, and are at an
129 cerebrospinal fluid comprising either raised white cell counts and/or raised levels of interferon-alp
131 clinical signs of encephalitis had elevated white cell counts in the blood caused mostly by increase
132 al antibodies) was 67.9%, whereas normal CSF white cell counts ruled out Lyme neuroborreliosis with a
133 re older or presented earlier and with lower white cell counts were more likely to have poor platelet
136 covery was associated with older ages, lower white cell counts, and earlier stages of illness at pres
137 transport variables, total and differential white cell counts, and serum concentrations of TNF and I
138 In a murine MPN model, CYT387 normalized white cell counts, hematocrit, spleen size, and restored
141 ts one to nine years of age, all of whom had white-cell counts of at least 50,000 per cubic millimete
142 ALL who were either 1 to 9 years of age with white-cell counts of at least 50,000 per cubic millimete
148 cells are the mating-competent form, whereas white cells do not mate but can still respond to pheromo
149 impair cerebral microcirculation and reduces white cell/endothelial activation after deep hypothermic
150 yan) cells, along with blue-yellow and black-white cells, establish three chromatic axes that are suf
153 od from KO mice showed a decrease in red and white cells, hemoglobin, hematocrit, and platelets.
154 erature, heart rate and immune: differential white cell, IL-6, TNF-alpha, IL-8, IL-10 responses (all
156 rodynamic interface in the motion of red and white cells in microvessels, and as a mechanotransducer
158 and linear, are capable of increasing mature white cells in the periphery and mobilizing stem/progeni
160 hese same neurons were surrounded by a focal white cell infiltrate, indicating the presence of an ant
161 dulate the accumulation and extravasation of white cells into tissues, and influence white cell activ
164 and development of a previously unrecognized white cell lineage is better understood, as is the impor
167 recommendations and the use of bead beating, white cell lysis buffer, and an internal control PCR.
168 K pathway, play opposite roles in regulating white cell mating as TEC1 deletion or CPH1 overexpressio
169 ivation of the Cph1 repressor Dig1 increases white cell mating ~4000 fold in glucose-depleted medium
172 that pheromone induces cohesiveness between white cells, minority opaque cells increase two-fold the
173 ns with CSF pleocytosis (16% vs 26% with >=5 white cells/muL) and CSF opening pressure >200 mmH2O (16
174 groups had lower age- and sex-adjusted total white cells, neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, and eo
177 gh the release of pheromone, signal majority white cells of opposite mating type to form a biofilm th
179 S) was associated with increased circulating white cell (P < 0.01) and neutrophil (P < 0.01) counts a
180 anial opening pressure (P = .03), higher CSF white cells (P = .007), and lower CSF glucose (P = .0003
181 cranial opening pressure (p=.03), higher CSF white cells (p=.007), and lower CSF glucose (p=.0003) co
183 n speculating about the possible role of the white cell pheromone response, it is hypothesized that i
184 he evolution of one such pathway, namely the white-cell pheromone response pathway in Candida albican
185 lume, conductivity and light scatter in four white-cell populations (eosinophils, lymphocytes, monocy
186 both opaque-to-white switching and selective white cell proliferation are required for entire populat
189 g for age, sex, measurement batch, estimated white cell proportions, BMI, smoking and methylation pri
196 same pheromones stimulate mating-incompetent white cells to become cohesive and adhesive, and enhance
197 ession of WOR3 results in mass conversion of white cells to opaque cells and that deletion of WOR3 af
201 that opaque cells begin to globally resemble white cells well before they irreversibly commit to swit
202 bution of each factor to mating, C. albicans white cells were reverse-engineered to express elevated,
203 iated with AIS/CES, eosinophil percentage of white cells with LAS, and thrombin-activatable fibrinoly
204 h-density infection (>2500 parasites per 200 white cells) with only mild symptoms before severe malar
205 e of both repressed (pink) and de-repressed (white) cells within a single colony when assayed with th
206 ating-associated genes in mating-incompetent white cells without causing G1 arrest or shmoo formation
207 chanism for their survival and whether these white cells would use any metabolites as signal molecule