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1  two large outcome trials (AIM-HIGH and HPS2-THRIVE).
2 ay, progressive microcephaly, and failure to thrive).
3 pace for transformed cells to survive and to thrive.
4 ate settlements that enable both cultures to thrive.
5 onatal-onset watery diarrhoea and failure to thrive.
6 s, interstitial lung disease, and failure to thrive.
7 enteropathy, hypoalbuminemia, and failure to thrive.
8 thargy; chronic FPIES can lead to failure to thrive.
9 ive behavior is fundamental for a society to thrive.
10 d mechanisms of tolerance that allow them to thrive.
11 s must produce the same metabolic outputs to thrive.
12 te immune response, thus helping pathogen to thrive.
13 reversible kidney dysfunction and failure to thrive.
14 rated eczema, severe diarrhea and failure to thrive.
15 ic outcomes: some colonies fail while others thrive.
16 phologically and behaviorally to survive and thrive.
17 the range of habitats in which a species can thrive.
18 and provide niches for dormant metastases to thrive.
19 ly variable soil compositions to survive and thrive.
20 outgrow, and inner-cell-mass cells failed to thrive.
21 of tumor cells that require this nutrient to thrive.
22 evere neurological regression and failure to thrive.
23 to severe developmental delay and failure to thrive.
24 formations to survive and, in most cases, to thrive.
25 one in which children and their families can thrive.
26 ease, skeletal abnormalities, and failure to thrive.
27  which EOMA cells evade oxidant toxicity and thrive.
28                      Most patients failed to thrive.
29 s under which this host microbe relationship thrives.
30  areas of rare-earth chemistry are currently thriving.
31 in evolution to increase infant survival and thriving.
32 hurus symmetricus and Scomber japonicus) are thriving.
33 used chiefly on vaccines, and vaccinology is thriving.
34 ea hydrothermal vents, microbial communities thrive across geochemical gradients above, at, and below
35 iagnosed with GCD according to the opacities thriving after LASIK (R124H) and PRK (R555W).
36 l symptoms of CS patients include failure to thrive and a severe neuropathology characterized by micr
37  This multisystem disorder causes failure to thrive and accelerated atherosclerosis leading to early
38  to late primitive streak stages but fail to thrive and are resorbed by E9.5.
39 dical services, and patient experiences will thrive and be the leaders of the health care system.
40  in diseased periodontal pockets, treponemes thrive and become a dominant component of the bacterial
41  some commensal bacteria such as E. coli can thrive and contribute to disease.
42 strointestinal disorders, such as failure to thrive and delayed gastric emptying, together accounted
43         Unlike L1 mice, GIRKI mice failed to thrive and developed diabetes, although their survival w
44 l littermates, but thereafter they failed to thrive and died before 6 weeks of age.
45 tinal (GI) disease because of the failure to thrive and early death from malnutrition in infants with
46 ng alpha but not beta suffer from failure to thrive and early mortality.
47 ils for how this pathogen utilizes chitin to thrive and evolve in its environmental reservoir.
48 potonia, intellectual disability, failure to thrive and feeding problems.
49 ; one presented in childhood with failure to thrive and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and the other wa
50 esents in the newborn period with failure to thrive and metabolic crisis leading to coma or even deat
51                                         They thrive and propagate westward as Rossby waves along thes
52 ia, and irritability, followed by failure to thrive and short stature.
53 ing the conditions at which intertidal reefs thrive and the sharp boundaries where reefs fail, which
54 mon and include chronic diarrhea, failure to thrive, and abdominal distention; however, extraintestin
55 dehydration, falls and fractures, failure to thrive, and pressure ulcers.
56 ) mice survive post-weaning, show failure to thrive, and show increased methylmalonic acid, propionyl
57 g infantile spasms, irritability, failure to thrive, and stereotypic hand movements.
58                                  In order to thrive, animals must be able to recognize aversive and a
59 lular processes in cancer is one of the most thriving arenas of cellular and molecular biology.
60 er microorganisms) depends on its ability to thrive as a biofilm, a closely packed community of cells
61 tressful conditions enable some symbionts to thrive as opportunists.
62                                      JID has thrived as the strength of its editorial leadership and
63 ifestyle of ammonia-oxidizing archaea, which thrive at a constantly low energy supply, thus offering
64 the molecular level including the ability to thrive at extreme environmental conditions, the presence
65 orting observations that Prochlorococcus LLI thrive at higher irradiances than other LL taxa, the res
66 nthes, Rotifera, Annelida and Arthropoda are thriving at 1.4 km depths in palaeometeoric fissure wate
67 ion: feeling attached to family and friends; thriving at school; experiencing bullying; and romantic
68 ategies and diversity of syntrophic bacteria thriving at the thermodynamic limit.
69  infants has been associated with failure to thrive, behavioral deficits, and sudden infant death.
70 educe the Incidence of Vascular Events (HPS2-THRIVE), but its net effects on health and healthcare co
71 ilic dermatitis/panniculitis, and failure to thrive, but without obvious primary immunodeficiency.
72 fort to understand how organisms survive and thrive by detecting and responding to challenges and opp
73 n they endure the host response but can also thrive by exploiting tissue-destructive inflammation, wh
74 ggests that these necrotrophic pathogens may thrive by subverting the resistance mechanisms acquired
75  specialties has included the development of thriving clinical-trial cultures, public-private partner
76  clean and abundant water is the keystone of thriving communities, increasing demand and volatile cli
77 llow the entire energy transfer process in a thriving culture of the purple bacteria, Rhodobacter sph
78                     In contrast, sea lamprey thrives despite developmental biliary atresia.
79 stems may have allowed the deep biosphere to thrive, despite violent phases during Earth's history su
80       We describe a new case with failure to thrive, developmental delay, lactic acidosis and severe
81 bited global developmental delay, failure to thrive, dilated cardiomyopathy and epilepsy, ultimately
82                             The emergence of thriving, diverse communities throughout human history s
83 Mice lacking Lpcat3 in the intestine fail to thrive during weaning and exhibit enterocyte lipid accum
84 -/-) mice have reduced viability and fail to thrive early after birth.
85      In North America's Chesapeake Bay, once-thriving eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) populati
86  using an environment in which the cells can thrive, enabling an insult-free myocardial cell delivery
87  is surprising that many invasives appear to thrive even with low levels of sequence-based genetic va
88  such as bamboo allow feeding specialists to thrive, even a moderate change in seasonality may outstr
89 ical-research called ergodic theory that has thrived ever since, and we discuss some of recent develo
90 t whilst high temperature tolerant ostracods thrived except in anoxic deeper-waters.
91 sorder, developmental regression, failure-to-thrive, exercise intolerance/fatigue) was associated wit
92   Elevated sweat chloride levels, failure to thrive (FTT), and lung disease are characteristic featur
93  syndrome (BRS), characterized by failure to thrive, global developmental delay, feeding problems, hy
94 ents during infancy, resulting in failure to thrive, hepatomegaly, and hepatic failure, and an averag
95 ood) and harvesting the shrimp and fish that thrive if mangroves are not cut.
96 dividual groups, however, are more likely to thrive if they adopt a disruptive strategy.
97 dinarily diverse, sponge-dominated community thriving immediately after the Hirnantian extinction in
98 y onset multisystem disorder with failure to thrive, immunodeficiency and neurological symptoms.
99 ge, thereby enabling S. aureus to attach and thrive in a biofilm mode of growth.
100 iency depending on illumination intensity to thrive in a highly dynamic natural environment.
101 iology based on its surroundings in order to thrive in a mammalian host as both a commensal and a pat
102 a protozoan parasite proficiently adapted to thrive in a parasitophorous vacuole (PV) formed in the c
103                                           To thrive in a time of rapid sea-level rise, tidal marshes
104                                       Corals thrive in a variety of environments, from low wave and t
105 hically diverse locations indicates that ARB thrive in a wide range of ecosystems.
106              Such capabilities allow them to thrive in a wide range of habitats.
107 nine-deiminase system (Arc) allows USA300 to thrive in acidic environments that mimic human skin.
108 any needs of delinquent youth will help them thrive in adulthood.
109 ental changes has allowed these organisms to thrive in all parts of the globe.
110 ergy storage is designing catalysts that can thrive in an assembled device.
111 ymatic activity, these organisms are able to thrive in an environment contaminated with toxic haloaro
112  area of cell loss, revealing that NG2 cells thrive in an environment that is toxic to other CNS cell
113                                           To thrive in an ever-changing environment, microbes must wi
114 rent bacterial species, our microbiota, that thrive in an often symbiotic relationship with the host.
115 thogens use to "win the fight" over zinc and thrive in an otherwise hostile environment.
116                                   Mosquitoes thrive in areas of high humidity and rainfall, in which
117 ns in South America, where it has evolved to thrive in arid habitats.
118 e strategies that can be used to survive and thrive in both of these worlds.
119  (BTLs) are abundant in crenarchaeota, which thrive in both thermophilic and nonthermophilic environm
120 g subgroup D_C1, which seems to specifically thrive in coastal waters.
121 lmologists will need to have broad skills to thrive in complex health care organizations.
122 ic pathogens, therefore, is their ability to thrive in disparate niches within the host.
123 diatoms are important primary producers that thrive in diverse and dynamic environments.
124  such pathogens also exploit inflammation to thrive in dysbiotic conditions.
125 hese phenotypes allow species to survive and thrive in environmental conditions that mimic disease st
126 nd that these advantages allow polyploids to thrive in environments that pose challenges to the polyp
127 actin permits many Gram-negative bacteria to thrive in environments where low soluble iron concentrat
128 any adaptations that allow it to survive and thrive in ethanol-rich environments.
129    Archaea are renowned for their ability to thrive in extreme environments, although they can be fou
130 oblems facing many biological networks which thrive in fluctuating environments.
131 that may enable non-calcifying anthozoans to thrive in future environments, i.e. higher seawater pCO2
132 mplex seems to underpin its capacity both to thrive in habitats ranging from the equator to the subar
133  it appears that religion is hard pressed to thrive in healthy societies, but poor conditions do not
134 artnerships in increasing corals' ability to thrive in high temperature conditions.
135 tly to modern regularization approaches that thrive in high-dimensional settings.
136  drug-resistant bacteria that are adapted to thrive in hospitalized patients.
137 e term synanthropic describes organisms that thrive in human-altered habitats.
138 ever more accurate and dynamic robots, which thrive in industrial automation, and will probably conti
139 racterized by severe hypotonia, a failure to thrive in infancy and, on emerging from infancy, evidenc
140  to a variety of stresses and enable them to thrive in less than favorable growth conditions.
141                                       Corals thrive in low nutrient environments and the conservation
142 species and the survival of a few adapted to thrive in low-oxygen conditions (Stages I to 0) and (ii)
143 advantage, allowing members of this class to thrive in most environments on earth.
144 t-limiting environments, and permits them to thrive in niches enriched in far-red light.
145 mosynthetic bacteria and marine animals that thrive in nutrient-poor environments such as the deep se
146                          Extremophile plants thrive in places where most plant species cannot survive
147                   Phototrophs in ikaite thus thrive in polymer-bound endolithic biofilms in a complex
148 at the strategies employed by methanogens to thrive in salt-saturating conditions are not limited to
149 sed a reduction in the organism's ability to thrive in serum, a deficiency in epithelial cell invasio
150 h is thought to contribute to its ability to thrive in settings with low oxygen availability.
151 hich are beneficial commensal organisms that thrive in similar locales as Enterobacteriaceae.
152 and possess characteristics enabling them to thrive in that environment.
153 DNA upstream of their Myc gene removed still thrive in the absence of stress.
154  produce copious amounts of lactic acid, and thrive in the acid environment that it generates.
155 tified a mechanism by which metastatic cells thrive in the brain microenvironment and use the high-af
156 ve evolved diverse strategies to survive and thrive in the carbohydrate-rich oral cavity.
157   Few species of reptant decapod crustaceans thrive in the cold-stenothermal waters of the Southern O
158                          Many microorganisms thrive in the dilute environment due to their capacity t
159  but many of these bacterial indicators also thrive in the environment and in other mammalian hosts.
160 adox: how do victim species survive and even thrive in the face of a continuous onslaught of more rap
161 tidimensional characteristic enabling one to thrive in the face of adversity.
162  responses that allow organisms to adapt and thrive in the face of diverse challenges, including thos
163 stems in ways that allow them to persist and thrive in the face of thermal fluctuation.
164 ion planning strategies, to ensure that they thrive in the future, not only as tourist attractions bu
165  is physiologically important for E. coli to thrive in the gallbladder and upper intestinal tract, wh
166 estinal (GI) microbiota is highly adapted to thrive in the GI environment and performs key functions
167 gastrointestinal tracts of patients and that thrive in the hospital environment.
168  the long lifespan of schistosomes, that can thrive in the host for decades.
169                                  In order to thrive in the host, S. flexneri must adapt to environmen
170                                           To thrive in the human body, HIV fuses to its target cell a
171  hypoxia and high temperatures, were able to thrive in the immediate aftermath of the extinction.
172 ng the bacteria to outcompete commensals and thrive in the inflamed gut.
173       Demersal spawning enables flounders to thrive in the low salinity of the Northern Baltic, where
174 e solute explains how Trichodesmium spp. can thrive in the marine system at varying salinities and pr
175 tb) is the bacteria's ability to survive and thrive in the presence of numerous stresses mounted by t
176 table habitats for life by allowing hosts to thrive in the presence of oxygen and to convert light in
177         Selected or engineered microbes that thrive in the presence of toxic chemicals can be assesse
178  honey bees are adapted to tolerate and even thrive in the presence of toxic compounds that occur nat
179 ensure that biomedical research continues to thrive in the United States.
180 to infiltrate autochthonous mouse melanomas, thrive in their microenvironment, and induce their regre
181   How complex ecosystems (termed anchialine) thrive in this globally distributed, cryptic environment
182 re-malignant cells must adapt to acidosis to thrive in this hostile microenvironment.
183 map for academic departments of neurology to thrive in today's increasingly regulated environment.
184 of wavelengths has allowed many organisms to thrive in unique light environments.
185 mutualistic gut bacteria with the ability to thrive in various niches, including those influenced by
186 ght circumstances in which top predators can thrive in warmer environments and contribute to our know
187 tion is the ability of some algal strains to thrive in waters unsuitable for conventional crop irriga
188 ant hepatocyte progenitor cells appeared and thrived in a complex cellular and cytokine milieu until
189 period of North America and Europe, but they thrived in South America up to the end of the Mesozoic e
190 istic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which thrives in a number of habitats ranging from soil and wa
191 lla pneumophila is a bacterial pathogen that thrives in alveolar macrophages, causing a severe pneumo
192 most abundant desert mosses in the world and thrives in an extreme environment with multiple but limi
193 he enchytraeid worm, a bulk soil feeder that thrives in Arctic peatlands.
194 ent of the severe diarrheal disease cholera, thrives in both marine environments and the human host.
195 iant kelp, a coastal foundation species that thrives in cold, nutrient-rich waters and is considered
196             The thermophilic alga C. merolae thrives in extreme environments (low pH and temperature
197 th West Hot Springs, SWHS) of Magadi tilapia thrives in fast-flowing hotsprings with daytime highs of
198 ginosa, an opportunistic human pathogen that thrives in flow conditions such as in catheters and resp
199 Mountains and a known indicator species that thrives in large and well-protected blocks of old growth
200 ain why and how multiculturality emerges and thrives in our world.
201                   Mycobacterium tuberculosis thrives in oxidative environments such as the macrophage
202                       Ralstonia solanacearum thrives in plant xylem vessels and causes bacterial wilt
203 he virus to Aedes albopictus, a species that thrives in temperate regions.
204  Thus, our findings indicate that Salmonella thrives in the inflamed gut by overcoming the zinc seque
205 ver, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium thrives in the inflamed gut by scavenging for iron with
206 imurium causes gastroenteritis in humans and thrives in the inflamed gut.
207                                  Harsh hakea thrives in the nutrient-impoverished, ancient soils of s
208 brio cholerae is a facultative pathogen that thrives in two nutritionally disparate environments, aqu
209 l viruses have evolved to infect hosts often thriving in extreme conditions such as high temperatures
210                Extremophiles, microorganisms thriving in extreme environmental conditions, must have
211                               Archaea, while thriving in extreme environments and accounting for appr
212 -conserved DNA repair machineries, organisms thriving in extreme environments are expected to have de
213 previously overlooked strategy for Wolbachia thriving in nature.
214 bivory, either by defending themselves or by thriving in risky areas where carnivores hunt.
215              Whether or not marine organisms thriving in this cold stenothermal environment are able
216                                              Thriving in this engineered pond system, brine shrimp (
217 e infants meet the definition of 'failure to thrive' in the first year of life.
218 the capacity of children to adjust, and even thrive, in the face of such challenge.
219 e Medicine, postintensive care syndrome, and THRIVE initiatives.
220        In order for Staphylococcus aureus to thrive inside the mammalian host, the bacterium has to o
221 nvestigating nutritionally based "failure-to-thrive" issues, particularly regarding the long-term imp
222 rints at Ndn and Mkrn3 and suffer failure to thrive leading to a fully penetrant neonatal lethality.
223                                  Pooled ECHO/THRIVE lipid and body fat data are presented from the EC
224 al presentation of CD can include failure to thrive, malnutrition, and distension in juveniles.
225 nts with PYCR2 mutations included failure to thrive, microcephaly, craniofacial dysmorphism, progress
226 ra-abdominal abscess (n = 75) and failure to thrive (n = 38).
227 erebrovascular accident (n = 80), failure to thrive (n = 71), other central nervous system disorder (
228 aemorrhage (n=1), dyspnoea (n=1), failure to thrive (n=1), and interstitial lung disease (n=1).
229 creased for comorbid diagnoses of failure to thrive, neurodevelopmental delay, cardiopulmonary anomal
230 glucose-galactose malabsorption syndrome but thrive normally when fed a glucose-galactose-free diet.
231 em vulnerable to necrotrophic pathogens that thrive on dead host cells.
232                                 Cancer cells thrive on genetic and epigenetic changes that confer a s
233 e evolution of vasculature enabled plants to thrive on land.
234 e was magnified for fast-growing tumors that thrive on long periods of unhindered growth without chem
235   Yet many mite and lepidopteran species can thrive on plants defended by cyanogenic glucosides.
236  nutrients by symbionts enables consumers to thrive on resources that might otherwise be insufficient
237 lations toward a predominance of clones that thrive on the CAF-derived factors CXCL12 and IGF1.
238  plants and have the demonstrated ability to thrive on wastewater rich in dissolved organic compounds
239 minifers were driven from shallow-waters but thrived on dysoxic slopes margins.
240  large segments of the world population have thrived on plant-based diets.
241             The field of organic electronics thrives on the hope of enabling low-cost, solution-proce
242 idopsis thaliana) and Brassica crop species, thrives on the shores of Lake Tuz, Turkey, where soils a
243                                      Besides thriving on altered glucose metabolism, cancer cells und
244                         Marine Synechococcus thrive over a range of light regimes in the ocean.
245  create a microenvironment where tumor cells thrive over other cells.
246                           The existence of a thriving peatland at 2700-2150 cal.
247 orosome, by which it is perfectly adapted to thrive photosynthetically under extremely low light cond
248                                          The THRIVE platform provides an integrated workflow for anal
249 mental determinants are essential to achieve thriving populations.
250                                              THRIVE promotes flexible deployment, a maintainable code
251 x and emergent biological phenomena has also thrived rapidly in recent years, revealing adaptive and
252 LS is characterized by hypotonia, failure to thrive, reduced body weight, intellectual disability, an
253 l systems of fixed size the population would thrive regardless of its average payoff.
254 severe malabsorptive diarrhea and failure to thrive, required prolonged parenteral nutrition support,
255 ed on the plausible evolution lines for this thriving scientific field, as well as the main practical
256  aciduria in early childhood with failure to thrive, seizures, developmental delay, mental retardatio
257 ; weight -2.1 SDS) presented with failure to thrive, short stature, severe hypocalcemia and gross mot
258 agnetic order by ultrashort laser pulses has thrived since it was observed that such pulses can be us
259  with severe infantile-onset IBD, failure to thrive, skin rash, and perirectal abscesses refractory t
260 and dissemination, transposases guarantee to thrive so long as nucleic acid-based life forms exist.
261 ese interactions are necessary for tumors to thrive, so blocking them might be a highly effective met
262 coupled receptor (GPCRs) drug discovery is a thriving strategy in the pharmaceutical industry.
263 hemotactic responses enable this organism to thrive successfully in marine oxygen-depletion zones.
264                                      In HPS2-THRIVE, the addition of extended-release niacin-laropipr
265                                           To thrive, the bacteria residing in their mammalian host ha
266 he "soil") for cancer cells (the "seeds") to thrive; these changes include increased inflammatory mon
267                               To survive and thrive, they must make appropriate behavioral decisions.
268 er, pups are born through natural mating and thrive through maternal lactation.
269 RB) and Thiothrichales (sulfur-oxidizers) to thrive through S cycling.
270 fected Subjects of TMC278 and Efavirenz) and THRIVE (TMC278 Against HIV, in a Once-Daily Regimen Vers
271 mic and optometric community to co-exist and thrive to provide better patient care.
272 ogical phenotype characterized by failure to thrive, tremor, and gait ataxia.
273 enhances the expression of protumoral genes, thrives tumor malignancy, and leads to the emergence of
274                                 We introduce THRIVE (Tumor Heterogeneity Research Interactive Visuali
275 chosis, severe nail dystrophy and failure to thrive, two heterozygous mutations in ABCA12 (c.2956C>T,
276 chosis, severe nail dystrophy and failure to thrive, two heterozygous mutations in ABCA12 (c.2956C>T,
277 ilize diverse strategies that enable them to thrive under adverse conditions while simultaneously inh
278 al source of interest, since these organisms thrive under conditions that likely lead to constant chr
279 30 exist in widely different bacteria, which thrive under environments with large fluctuations in tem
280                             Their ability to thrive under low-light conditions has been linked to the
281 e identification of tree genotypes that will thrive under more arid conditions has grown.
282 pecies undergo local extinction while others thrive under novel conditions remains unclear.
283 istant organisms such as anemones, which may thrive under ocean acidification conditions.
284 , urchins did not only persist but actually 'thrived' under extreme CO2 conditions.
285 ized by severe hypercalcemia with failure to thrive, vomiting, dehydration, and nephrocalcinosis.
286                                              THRIVE was designed with highly multiplexed immunofluore
287                                      Alive & Thrive was implemented over a period of 6 y (2009-2014)
288 E specifically in muscle but are fertile and thrive well into adulthood.
289 g power parity index) during 4 years in HPS2-THRIVE were evaluated using estimates of the impact of s
290 ides: Impact on Global Health trial and HPS2-THRIVE - were both negative.
291 by, with a right to be counted, survive, and thrive wherever they are born.
292  describe three infants, two with failure to thrive, who had dehydration and diarrhea within 1 month
293 t birth but exhibited progressive failure to thrive, whole-body wasting, and ataxia and died at appro
294 ine waters with low to moderate salinity and thrive with elevated sea surface temperature (SST).
295          In contrast, most alien fishes will thrive, with some species increasing in abundance and ra
296  infection-driven inflammatory bone erosion, thrives within a highly inflamed milieu and disseminates
297 the innate and adaptive immune responses and thrives within resting macrophages.
298  set of environmental niches in which it can thrive without needing a host.
299          To understand how the adult lamprey thrives without the ability to secrete bile, we examined
300 of nucleic acid and boron chemistries lies a thriving world of possibilities.

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