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1 election strategies have led to a decline in acute allograft rejection.
2 cance of common specific vascular lesions in acute allograft rejection.
3 vein endothelitis, which is consistent with acute allograft rejection.
4 ty and indicate instead that it is a form of acute allograft rejection.
5 rate levels, may serve as an early marker of acute allograft rejection.
6 is that donor-reactive TH1 cells can promote acute allograft rejection.
7 transplantation model was used for studying acute allograft rejection.
8 ssumed that IFNgamma plays a central role in acute allograft rejection.
9 orecognition pathway participate actively in acute allograft rejection.
10 diac failure, often faces complications from acute allograft rejection.
11 n to inhibit T cell activation and attenuate acute allograft rejection.
12 nt targets in some liver diseases, including acute allograft rejection.
13 3 inhibitors R507 and R545 for prevention of acute allograft rejection.
14 EPTOR in CD4(+) T effectors fails to inhibit acute allograft rejection.
15 ed with AKI and 9 (4.9%) were diagnosed with acute allograft rejection.
16 serve as early serum markers for monitoring acute allograft rejection.
17 sponses during an infection, malignancy, and acute allograft rejection.
18 by donor DCs is alone insufficient to elicit acute allograft rejection.
19 OR (LysM(C)(re) Mtor(fl/fl) ) did not affect acute allograft rejection.
20 al models does not play an essential role in acute allograft rejection.
21 tion to the response to steroid treatment of acute allograft rejection.
22 tion, nor alters Th1 immune responses during acute allograft rejection.
23 at shock protein (HSP)-70 is associated with acute allograft rejection.
24 JAK3 inhibition with CP-690,550 prevents acute allograft rejection.
25 activation of specific leukocyte subsets in acute allograft rejection.
26 with or without immunosuppression to prevent acute allograft rejection.
27 ents, of whom 23 (64%) showed some degree of acute allograft rejection.
28 dent and IFN-gamma-independent mechanisms of acute allograft rejection.
29 appaB activation in T cells is necessary for acute allograft rejection.
30 imary targets of host CTL-mediated injury in acute allograft rejection.
31 cytotoxic during cardiac, hepatic, and renal acute allograft rejection.
32 showed profound resistance to development of acute allograft rejection.
33 e independently predicts a decreased risk of acute allograft rejection.
34 would be a major advance in the treatment of acute allograft rejection.
35 are now used routinely for the diagnosis of acute allograft rejection.
36 osuppressive agent used for the treatment of acute allograft rejection.
37 these cells into SCID recipients resulted in acute allograft rejection.
38 of IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, and IL-15 genes during acute allograft rejection.
39 selectively deplete monocyte/macrophages in acute allograft rejection, although this did not result
40 level of CD40L transcripts is evident during acute allograft rejection and (ii) the kinetics of CD40L
41 ts were excluded from analysis (5 because of acute allograft rejection and 4 because of poor acoustic
42 Gs) are used clinically to prevent and treat acute allograft rejection and are believed to modulate t
43 17 has recently been observed in settings of acute allograft rejection and drives rejection in T-bet-
44 VEGF may play a role in the pathogenesis of acute allograft rejection and it may serve as a reliable
45 merican patients demonstrate higher rates of acute allograft rejection and lower kidney-graft surviva
46 s considered important in the development of acute allograft rejection and many other immune-mediated
47 ve therapy in response to specific grades of acute allograft rejection and may result in decreased co
49 that HSP-70 levels are not increased during acute allograft rejection and that an absence of the ind
50 how that TLRs are involved in the process of acute allograft rejection and that their activation can
51 sterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol, acute allograft rejection and time since transplantation
52 of immune activation is controversial during acute allograft rejection and unknown in xenotransplanta
53 alitatively similar to those observed during acute allograft rejection, and (3) no specific immune re
54 oth costimulatory blockade, which suppresses acute allograft rejection, and a favorable balance betwe
55 rt correlates directly with the evolution of acute allograft rejection, and that immunosuppressive th
56 se herbal preparation, CMX-13, on inhibiting acute allograft rejection (AR) in a highly histoincompat
57 ted renal allograft nephropathy (BKVAN) from acute allograft rejection (AR) in renal transplant recip
59 ed transplant patients it is associated with acute allograft rejection as well as chronic allograft v
60 cidence of biopsy proven grade II or greater acute allograft rejection at 6 months was 58% in the AZA
61 ejection, but rather caused a delayed severe acute allograft rejection at approximately 45 days postt
62 lineage have been implicated as effectors in acute allograft rejection based on short-term depletion
64 receptors [TCR]) are known to be crucial for acute allograft rejection, but the role of other members
65 /macrophages are recognized as a hallmark of acute allograft rejection, but the roles that they play
66 ctivation pathway with CS1 peptides prevents acute allograft rejection by inhibiting expansion of ant
69 ade, delayed OX40 stimulation did not induce acute allograft rejection despite priming of graft-react
70 onal immunosuppressive strategies that check acute allograft rejection do not prevent TV; indeed 50%
72 f sirolimus reduced the overall incidence of acute allograft rejection episodes to 7.5% from 32% in t
73 ed clinical or histopathological evidence of acute allograft rejection episodes, cytokine release syn
74 to immunosuppressive regimens, treatment of acute allograft rejection, feeding, and viral surveillan
75 respective cut-off, accurately discriminates acute allograft rejection from other causes of AKI in fo
76 diagnosis of AKI, accurately discriminating acute allograft rejection from other causes of AKI in re
77 e of the indirect allorecognition pathway in acute allograft rejection has been documented both in or
81 the inducible form of HSP-70 neither delays acute allograft rejection, impairs DCs maturation, nor a
82 0 activates DCs and plays a critical role in acute allograft rejection in an experimental model that
83 udy, we examine the participation of TLR4 in acute allograft rejection in an orthotopic mouse model o
84 molecules has been efficacious in preventing acute allograft rejection in certain but not all transpl
86 between elevated cardiac troponin levels and acute allograft rejection in patients who have received
89 ical observations showing significantly less acute allograft rejections in recipients having high IgM
95 kidney transplantation, we demonstrated that acute allograft rejection occurred equally in MyD88-suff
98 fragments and the presence of biopsy-proven acute allograft rejection or AGA (assessed by coronary a
100 e observed that (1) IL-4 is not required for acute allograft rejection or allogeneic DTH responses in
101 The primary study endpoint was biopsy-proven acute allograft rejection over the first 6 months posttr
102 as ligand (FasL), is closely correlated with acute allograft rejection, particularly when two or more
103 perforin expression correlates strongly with acute allograft rejection, perforin-deficient mice rejec
104 cells had arrived at the graft-but promoted acute allograft rejection rather than allograft acceptan
108 in self- and allograft-tolerance and risk of acute allograft rejection reported in retrospective stud
113 TLA4-Ig and 5C8 can both prevent and reverse acute allograft rejection, significantly prolonging the
114 ransplant and restored the histopathology of acute allograft rejection to that observed in allografts
116 study, we investigated the role of IL-17 in acute allograft rejection using IL-17-deficient mice.
122 of T cell-intrinsic NF-kappaB activation in acute allograft rejection, we used IkappaBalphaDeltaN-Tg
123 ipients experiencing biopsy-proven recurrent acute allograft rejection were eligible if the current r
124 determine whether MMF decreases episodes of acute allograft rejection when compared with azathioprin
125 rchetypical cell-mediated immune response of acute allograft rejection, whereas TH2 cells promote all
126 h1 response has been shown to play a role in acute allograft rejection, whereas the Th2 response has
127 23, p = 0.0014), as well as the diagnosis of acute allograft rejection, which is preceded by increase
128 (C5b-C9) has been demonstrated previously in acute allograft rejection with the use of C6-deficient P