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1 mmon causes of systemic amyloidosis in North America.
2 an sedimentary succession from western North America.
3 s in the prevalence of Nosema bombi in North America.
4 of 19 PET/CT pediatric institutions in North America.
5 s cohort studies in western Europe and North America.
6 unstudied until the recent outbreak in Latin America.
7 se, which devastates cacao cultures in South America.
8 of GPP over mid- and high latitudes in North America.
9 and pre-montane forests of Central and South America.
10 s for six tree species in northwestern North America.
11 ) and 37% (95% CI, 26%-50%) outside of North America.
12 efforts in Africa and residual foci in Latin America.
13  rejecting earlier records of bison in North America.
14 event their permanent establishment in North America.
15  selected for cultivation in North and South America.
16 ects several million people, mostly in Latin-America.
17 ase of conservation concern in eastern North America.
18 c-related deaths in endemic regions of Latin America.
19 driver of serotype IV GBS expansion in North America.
20 ncellation of more than 100 flights in North America.
21 a fumiferiana), a major forest pest in North America.
22 V) infection had spread to South and Central America.
23 ge and sustained epidemics in Asia and Latin America.
24 ns from continental Asia in Europe and North America.
25 untries hosting large communities from Latin America.
26 sion technology in Africa, Eurasia and North America.
27 n well-documented in, and confined to, South America.
28 s were identified in the late 1950s in South America.
29 xtent of over 900,000 km(2) in Eastern North America.
30 es of wild snakes from six families in North America.
31 e mammals of tropical Africa, Asia and South America.
32 or noninvasive testing at 193 sites in North America.
33  large-scale Cu smelting activities in South America.
34 early 20th century pollution in remote North America.
35  our current ACP collection but somewhere in America.
36 ined evidence of humans in Pleistocene North America.
37  the Caribbean basin and East Coast of North America.
38 ntries in Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America.
39 hese HIV populations receiving care in North America.
40 ntries in Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America.
41 s in the Atlantic Forest (AF) hotspot, South America.
42 ss than 1251 g in 13 neonatal units in North America.
43 racteristics of childhood nystagmus in North America.
44  10-20% of the maximum width of Africa/South America.
45 , is a major cause of heart failure in Latin America.
46 countries in Europe, Asia-Pacific, and North America.
47 ir known range, at least, into western North America.
48 orests of the Great Basin (GB) region, North America.
49 astern North America into Mexico and Central America.
50 us, is a rare cause of encephalitis in North America.
51 rop used by the prehispanic civilizations in America.
52 stant maize (Zea mays) lines from Europe and America.
53 -based combination therapies (ACTs) in Latin America.
54          Zika virus outbreak is spreading in America.
55 n-breeding grounds in the Caribbean or South America.
56 ilar to recent estimates in Europe and North America.
57 d and commercial pollinator in eastern North America.
58 ve SLP anomalies over the Atlantic and North America.
59 ns isolated from wild birds inhabiting North America.
60 pted by 5-6 weeks of migration through North America.
61 ruzi and affects 5-8 million people in Latin America.
62 y maintained during subsequent spread to the Americas.
63 ate vaccines (PCVs) in five countries in the Americas.
64 roductive enough to be a staple grain in the Americas.
65 he lives of children and families across the Americas.
66 ost lethal of all infectious diseases in the Americas.
67  tropical forests, especially outside of the Americas.
68 erstanding of the spread of the virus in the Americas.
69 ean, and more recently the Caribbean and the Americas.
70  influence following European arrival to the Americas.
71 , which are also (re)emerging viruses in the Americas.
72 inent, following the initial peopling of the Americas.
73 bal health threat, causing a pandemic in the Americas.
74 ,000 years ago until the colonization of the Americas.
75 g countries in Asia, Africa and the tropical Americas.
76  responsible for the recent epidemics in the Americas.
77 s the fourth most common indication in North America (12.9%) and Europe (10.2%) and fifth in South Am
78                     It ranked third in North America (14.2%).
79 dentified 41 eligible studies (24 from North America, 16 from Europe, and one from China) that assess
80 ess in nine open marine regions around North America (197 region-years) while accounting for imperfec
81 ddle East (32.8%), Africa (32.4%), and South America (22.8%).
82  they migrate no farther than northern South America [22].
83 12.9%) and Europe (10.2%) and fifth in South America (3.8%).
84  hours) compared with Asia (49 hours) or the Americas (44 hours).
85 lf-identified as being from Central or South America, 478 (46.7%) were women and 757 (53.3%) were men
86 ne percent of patients were exposed in South America; 71% were diagnosed in Europe.
87 ldest well-constrained bison fossil in North America, a 130,000-y-old steppe bison, Bison cf. priscus
88 though the AF was substantially lower in the Americas (AF, 12.2 [95% CI, 8.9-15.6]), based on samples
89 ta are available from the Middle East, South America, Africa, or south Asia.
90 ield a detailed historical portrait of North America after European settlement and support substantia
91       We selected 55 cactus species from the Americas, all geo-referenced seed collections, reflectin
92 ozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, is endemic in Latin America and affects 10 million people worldwide.
93  over 150 genital swabs from North and South America and Africa, we detected recombinants worldwide.
94 is much more diverse in Africa than in South America and Asia.
95 lobal teleconnection pattern involving North America and Asia.
96 n intercepted in shipments coming into North America and Australia.
97 stinct Pt anomaly spread widely across North America and dating to the Younger Dryas (YD) onset.
98             PFAS production changed in North America and Europe around the year 2000, but impacts on
99 patients with Parkinson's disease from North America and Europe assessed between 1986 and 2016.
100  PSC Study Group and radiologists from North America and Europe have compiled the following position
101 ty regulations were implemented across North America and Europe to reduce chemical emissions that con
102 een 1986 and 2016 in nine cohorts from North America and Europe were assessed for eligibility.
103 consensus document by key leaders from North America and Europe with expertise in basic, translationa
104 andomisation was stratified by region (North America and Europe).
105  review was conducted at 20 centers in North America and Europe, and included all consecutive childre
106 r, randomized, parallel-group study in North America and Europe, healthy subjects and patients with m
107 untries in seven geographical regions: North America and Europe, South America, the Middle East, sout
108     Patients, recruited at 29 sites in North America and Europe, were randomly assigned to placebo, s
109 dence of inflammatory bowel disease in North America and Europe.
110 o have migrated to nonendemic areas of North America and Europe.
111 dache and clinical research centres in North America and Europe.
112 tpatient clinics in eight countries in North America and Europe.
113 l centers in 15 countries in North and South America and Europe.
114 ed at 119 hospitals in 11 countries in North America and Europe.
115  virus has spread to much of North and South America and has been introduced to many countries outsid
116 Spartina patens) in coastal marshes of North America and has potential to dramatically alter C cyclin
117 oss the Pacific Ocean to the shores of North America and Hawai'i.
118           Cenozoic calderas in western North America and in other intracontinental settings that gene
119 uzi (T. cruzi) infection is endemic in Latin America and is becoming a worldwide health burden.
120 ith S. sialis occurring in North and Central America and L. megaplaga endemic to Hispaniola.
121 ce) to sizes that were not possible in North America and Mesoamerica before the arrival of Europeans.
122 e found in contemporary populations in North America and Mesoamerica.
123 erstanding, our estimates suggest that South America and not Asia contributes the most to tropical pe
124 ent ( approximately 200-1,000 mm/y) in North America and South Africa that differ in the relative rep
125 dicted to occur in Sub-Saharan Africa, South America and Southeast Asia.
126 udy was conducted in 120 subjects from Latin America and Spain who were randomized to 4 groups: posac
127 origin influenza A viruses (IAVs) from North America and subjected them to evolutionary analyses.
128 tern and central Africa, 11% (5-18) in Latin America and the Caribbean, and 11% (2-20) in Asia.
129 central Africa, and 9.4% (6.6-13.2) in Latin America and the Caribbean.
130  was reported in 2015 from South and Central America and the Caribbean.
131  contributed to persistent droughts in North America and the Mediterranean.
132 ial data were from academic centers in North America and Western Europe, and half the proposals were
133                                     In North America and western Europe, incidence of syphilis has in
134 nturies was observed over northeastern North America and western Europe.
135     Neotropical migrants that breed in North America and winter in Central America occur in high conc
136  available for 260 women with 85.4% from the Americas and 14.6% from South Africa.
137 buted to 41 countries and territories in the Americas and 41 more in Africa.
138 raphical variation, being more common in the Americas and Europe than in Africa.
139 3% (95% CI, 2-4) and 4% (95% CI, 2-6) in the Americas and Europe to 21% (95% CI, 9-35) in the Western
140 the recent Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic in the Americas and its link to birth defects have attracted a
141        The Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak in the Americas and South Pacific poses a significant burden on
142 15-2016 epidemic of Zika virus (ZIKV) in the Americas and the Caribbean was associated with an unprec
143 ted on direct commercial flights between the Americas and West Africa, followed by dispersal by adult
144 ons to the emerging economies of Asia, Latin America, and Africa.
145 o all the temperate forests of Europe, North America, and Asia combined.
146  214 centres in North America, Europe, Latin America, and Australasia and were randomly assigned (1:1
147 horn sumac (Rhus typhina) is native to North America, and has been used by indigenous peoples for foo
148 es, Canada, Europe, Israel, Australia, Latin America, and Japan.
149 r general neurology centres in Europe, North America, and the Asia Pacific region, aged 16 years or o
150 27 countries in Europe, North America, South America, and the Asia-Pacific region.
151 y oncology practices mainly in Europe, North America, and the Asia-Pacific region.
152 years) was 100 (95% CI: 91, 110) in Northern America, and the estimated number of cases in 2015 was 3
153  beyond its origin near the equator in South America, and they provide a compelling demonstration of
154  are added has averaged 744 annually for the Americas, and we can expect the total to reach about 150
155         During the late Pleistocene of North America ( approximately 36,000 to 10,000 years ago), sab
156 idly and explosively spread from Asia to the Americas are unclear.
157 the precipitation delivered to western North America arrives during the cool season via midlatitude P
158 hree African-descendant populations in South America, as well as 124 individuals from six west Africa
159 reduction across the equator in the tropical Americas associated with Heinrich event 2 is suggested b
160                                        Latin America bears an important burden of critical care disea
161 ol-season storm tracks entered western North America between approximately 41 degrees N and 53 degree
162   The causal agents of Lyme disease in North America, Borrelia burgdorferi and Borrelia mayonii, are
163 Switzerland, and the UK) and North and South America (Brazil, Canada, and the USA) in The HIV-CAUSAL
164 e 2015 emergence of Zika virus (ZIKV) in the Americas brought new attention to this previously obscur
165 he main drivers of extreme droughts in South America, but are unable to explain the severity of the 2
166 and prepared foods were established in North America, but their impact on sodium intake is unclear.We
167 st prevalent endemic systemic mycosis in the Americas, but this situation might be changing with reco
168 ough to be a staple grain existed in Central America by 4,300 cal B.P.
169 ppbv) seasonal average surface O3 over North America can be attributed to East Asian anthropogenic em
170 imate of the protected area network in North America (Canada, United States, Mexico-NAM) to the proje
171 ddle East (Turkey pooled: 160), and Southern America (Chile: 202).
172 e storage per unit area is greatest in North America, China and Europe where there are thick vadose z
173 t the southern margin of permafrost in North America, climate change causes widespread permafrost tha
174 as been on the increase, especially in North America compared with other continents.
175 sphere was correlated with distance to North America, consistent with the historical production and c
176 atoolithus eggs reported from Asia and North America contrasts with the dearth of giant caenagnathid
177 spiratory premature mortalities within North America could be attributed to East Asia.
178 terrestrial bird species that breed in North America cross the Atlantic Ocean during autumn migration
179 non-neosauropod eusauropods known from North America, despite being younger than the classic neosauro
180              Other than an epidemic in South America due to a closely related strain, USA300 also see
181 anaceae is thought to have occurred in South America during its separation from Gondwana, but the fam
182 c establishes that bison first entered North America during the sea level lowstand accompanying marin
183 in 1864, CPB has spread rapidly across North America, Europe and Asia.
184 ith respect to air monitor sampling in North America, Europe, and Asia (adjusted R(2) within 2%) but
185 m 19 centres in eight countries within North America, Europe, and Asia.
186  in 17 countries across North America, Latin America, Europe, and Asia.
187 olled patients at 36 referral sites in North America, Europe, and southeast Asia.
188 intensively cultivated regions such as North America, Europe, India and intensively cultivated areas
189 ients from 69 neuromuscular centres in North America, Europe, Israel, Australia, and Japan.
190 orosis were enrolled in 214 centres in North America, Europe, Latin America, and Australasia and were
191 V-1 contributed more cases than HSV-2 in the Americas, Europe, and Western Pacific.
192 ohort study from 15 medical centres in North America evaluated records from 175 patients with ALS wit
193 e, coupled with his stated intention to put "America first" are creating anxiety and uncertainty abou
194 breeding in Argentina but returning to North America for the austral winter.
195 rained geochronology of any proxy from South America for this time period, spanning from the Last Gla
196 a cross-sectional online survey across North America from April 28, 2012 to November 13, 2013.
197  countries in Europe, Australasia, and North America from their prison administrations for 2011-14 to
198                            Subjects in North America had higher initial BMIs than those of subjects i
199 tion and moderate HSV-2 prevalence meant the Americas had the highest overall rate.
200                                        Latin America has a substantial burden of influenza and rising
201                                        Latin America has experienced two of the largest cholera epide
202                   The ZIKV outbreak in Latin America has very likely been fueled by the 2015-2016 El
203 The cataloging of the vascular plants of the Americas has a centuries-long history, but it is only in
204 c dengue-like disease, its appearance in the Americas has been accompanied by a multi-fold increase i
205              The spread of Zika virus in the Americas has been associated with a surge in Guillain-Ba
206  of both chikungunya and Zika viruses in the Americas has significantly expanded their distribution a
207          The rapid spread of ZIKV within the Americas has unveiled microcephaly (1) and Guillain-Barr
208                               Women in North America have a one in eight lifetime risk of developing
209 vations of malformed amphibians across North America have generated both concern and controversy.
210               Wildfires across western North America have increased in number and size over the past
211              Past severe droughts over North America have led to massive water shortages and increase
212 portant staple food crop in Africa and South America; however, ubiquitous deleterious mutations may s
213  In 2016, the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) recommended that anti-infective costs be
214 false-negative RDTs, first reported in South America in 2010, have been confirmed in Africa and Asia.
215  We find that the transmission risk in South America in 2015 was the highest since 1950.
216 t devastating forest insect of eastern North America in common garden experiments.
217 est (terra firme) originated in Africa-South America, in the early Palaeocene, after which several bi
218  consumed in countries from Central to South America, in-depth knowledge on genotype-related differen
219 ils collected from 18 sites throughout North America included in a 100-day laboratory incubation expe
220 nd radiated, in parallel, from eastern North America into Mexico and Central America.
221  in Brazil extends to other regions in South America is needed.
222    While the subspecies established in North America is the European gypsy moth (L. dispar dispar), w
223 nter weather and climate in Europe and North America is the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the dom
224 t Brazil in the establishment of ZIKV in the Americas is further supported by geographic analysis of
225 e most prevalent tick-borne illness in North America, is caused by Borrelia burgdorferi The long-term
226 lpine aquatic species, particularly in North America, is lacking, thereby hindering conservation and
227                  In Europe, Latin, and North America KS risk was 6 times higher in men who have sex w
228           The rapid expansion of ZIKV in the Americas largely has been due to the biology and behavio
229 ialised clinics in 17 countries across North America, Latin America, Europe, and Asia.
230 volcanism has been advocated for the Central America margin while at other locations mass balance con
231 e deep mantle in this section of the Central America margin.
232 ope, west Asia and north Africa, and central America, medium-size farms (20-50 ha) also contribute su
233 k only among women and Latinos born in South America/Mexico (p-trend < 0.003).
234 f 6 or more, Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America (MGFA) class II-IV disease, vaccination against
235 in the remaining uncleared savannas of South America, most likely due to fire suppression and land fr
236 breed in North America and winter in Central America occur in high concentrations on their non-breedi
237 mmatory bowel disease exceeded 0.3% in North America, Oceania, and many countries in Europe.
238 risk of ICH were enrollment in Asia or Latin America, older age, prior stroke/transient ischemic atta
239  has been learned during the outbreak in the Americas on the underlying mechanisms and pathogenesis o
240 data on spillover by microsporidia, in North America or elsewhere, makes it difficult to identify the
241 t or case-control studies conducted in North America or the United Kingdom between 1948 and 2012.
242 raphical (Asia, Europe, Australia, and North America) or climatic distinctions.
243 ations in northern lakes of Europe and North America over time scales of decades to millennia.
244       When humans moved from Asia toward the Americas over 18,000 y ago and eventually peopled the Ne
245 tivity compared with FluNet throughout Latin America, particularly among tropical countries with irre
246 n the delivery of critical care across Latin America, particularly in human resources.
247           Outbreaks in most countries in the Americas peaked in early to mid-2016.
248        The Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic in the Americas poses a public health emergency that requires a
249 based on the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America postintervention status criteria.
250 itions in the Infectious Diseases Society of America Practice Guidelines.
251 udies in Denmark (Snart Foraeldre) and North America [PRESTO (Pregnancy Study Online)] in which women
252  of the VNB lineage between Africa and South America prior to its diversification, supported by findi
253                         The United States of America produced the most articles (16), followed by Ger
254 reported PA of 1751 subjects enrolled in the Americas region of the TOPCAT trial (Treatment of Preser
255  to 148 potential donor populations in North America representing 46 distinct genetic lineages.
256 ering grounds in Greenland and Central/South America, respectively, interrupted by 5-6 weeks of migra
257 " are creating anxiety and uncertainty about America's domestic health policies and its global leader
258 ll water will identify the dangers hidden in America's drinking water supply and redirect attention t
259                      The Genetics Society of America's Edward Novitski Prize recognizes a single expe
260 ich influence habitats for over 60% of North America's fish, mussel, and crayfish species.
261  hydrological conditions over tropical South America (SA), in particular during abrupt millennial-sca
262 degrees S to 54 degrees S) in southern South America (SAS), to quantify the coupling of SAM and regio
263 evention, and Infectious Diseases Society of America searched, selected, and synthesized relevant evi
264 ent clinics in 27 countries in Europe, North America, South America, and the Asia-Pacific region.
265           Young Indigenous children in North America suffer from a higher degree of severe early chil
266 ion in MHC is stronger in samples from North America than those from Europe.
267 es with some Native American groups in South America than with Native Americans elsewhere, providing
268 docereal grown in the Andean region of South America that is of increasing interest worldwide as an a
269 ns in northern lakes across Europe and North America that uses visible-near-infrared (VNIR) spectrosc
270                                     In North America, the iron supplement ferumoxytol has gained cons
271 cal regions: North America and Europe, South America, the Middle East, south Asia, China, southeast A
272 n isolated from captive snakes outside North America, the pathogen has not been reported from wild sn
273 ancient agricultural system of eastern North America, the role of developmental plasticity in the pro
274 stern Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea and (3) Americas, the latter with a primary colonization in the
275           Over well-defined regions of North America, there are generally negative temporal trends in
276                               Throughout the Americas, thousands of enslaved Africans managed to esca
277 -controlled trial in 27 centers across North America to determine the safety and efficacy of allogene
278 s under current and future climates in Latin America to understand whether future coffee-suitable are
279 f developing regions (Africa, Asia and Latin America) to the total CH4 emissions had increased from 5
280 a (Ob Ugric people: Khanty and Mansi), South America (Tsimane) and South Asia (Minahasans and Sangire
281 rability of 20 tree species in western North America using the Canadian global circulation model unde
282 aiti, a known hub for pathogen spread to the Americas, warrants close monitoring of MAYV infection in
283 at six academic pediatric hospitals in North America was performed.
284                                        North America was the most affected region relative to GDP and
285     Transmission of Zika virus (ZIKV) in the Americas was first confirmed in May 2015 in northeast Br
286 us plant communities across Europe and North America, we show that disturbance diversifies communitie
287 a, the Middle East, southeast Asia and South America; we also explored demographic, clinical, and soc
288 and from 92 CBE case-parent trios from North America were analysed.
289 ds from four commercial cultivars from North America were collected at two sizes (3-5 and>7cm).
290 te Pleistocene species from Europe and North America were the same.
291 chocerciasis patient sera (n = 152) from the Americas, West Africa, Central Africa, and East Africa a
292 of morbidity and mortality in areas of Latin America where Chagas disease is endemic and among infect
293 an Africa is of concern, particularly to the Americas, where native mosquito species are capable of v
294  and native cutthroat trout in western North America will lead to genomic extinction of the latter.
295       Forest ecosystems across western North America will likely see shifts in both tree species domi
296 )), the largest mutation population in North America with an aggressive disease progression, were dis
297 hic data from field populations across North America with growth chamber warming experiments, we show
298  the water-limited Southwest region of North America with observed ranges in annual precipitation of
299 ure existed in the late Pleistocene of North America with Shuka Kaa on a different ancestral line com
300 developed using data from the What We Eat in America (WWEIA) study.

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