戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

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 for their effort to understand cognitive and behavioral disorders'.
2                            5/31 showed other behavioral disorders.
3 lated neurodegeneration, mood disorders, and behavioral disorders.
4  complement current treatment approaches for behavioral disorders.
5 th is an important cause of neurological and behavioral disorders.
6 ns including metabolic dysfunction, mood and behavioral disorders.
7 relationships between brain connectivity and behavioral disorders.
8  of variability in affective, cognitive, and behavioral disorders.
9 ient and outpatient contacts with mental and behavioral disorders.
10 ol whose impairment is implicated in several behavioral disorders.
11 rning, and memory and has been implicated in behavioral disorders.
12 d amygdala circuit mapping for patients with behavioral disorders.
13  broadly in other major mental illnesses and behavioral disorders.
14 hanism for impaired cognition in genetic and behavioral disorders.
15 plicated in animal social behavior and human behavioral disorders.
16 creased susceptibility to allergy-associated behavioral disorders.
17 disability, and 0.95 (95% CI, 0.80-1.12) for behavioral disorders.
18 G are a potential causal factor in childhood behavioral disorders.
19  way toward the targeted treatment of social behavioral disorders.
20  link between central insulin resistance and behavioral disorders.
21 y fever, food allergies, and psychiatric and behavioral disorders.
22 obiota as an actor in the gut barrier and in behavioral disorders.
23 e brain may be altered by Ab in movement and behavioral disorders.
24 reased dendritic spine density, and numerous behavioral disorders.
25 ty in mouse models of neurodevelopmental and behavioral disorders.
26 ) associated with diverse neurodevelopmental behavioral disorders.
27 d with a broad scope of life-long health and behavioral disorders.
28 ctual ability, memory, and susceptibility to behavioral disorders.
29 for nicotine or other drugs, or emotional or behavioral disorders.
30 behavior and how brain malfunctions underlie behavioral disorders.
31 stic groups that included both emotional and behavioral disorders.
32 cit/Hyperactivity Disorder and externalizing behavioral disorders.
33 ing schizophrenia and other neuropsychiatric/behavioral disorders.
34 ontaneous seizures with relatively innocuous behavioral disorders.
35 edication given to youths with emotional and behavioral disorders.
36 racterized SNPs in human candidate genes for behavioral disorders.
37 etic variation that could influence risk for behavioral disorders.
38 ease, inflammatory disease, and perhaps even behavioral disorders.
39 tion and acute inpatient treatment for their behavioral disorders.
40 ogic (2.0 [95% CI, 1.4-3.0]) or other mental/behavioral disorders (1.7 [95% CI, 1.0-3.1]) were simila
41  neurological findings were agitation (25%), behavioral disorders (25%), muscle weakness (23%), disor
42 ymptoms were difficulty concentrating (42%), behavioral disorders (27%), speech disorders (20%), and
43 and it occurred with both an emotional and a behavioral disorder 32%-68% of the time.
44 l diseases (86 patients [37.4%]), mental and behavioral disorders (77 patients [33.5%]), and infectio
45  intellectual disability, 0.7% and 0.1%; and behavioral disorder, 8.4% and 1.5%).
46 order (ADHD) is a highly heritable childhood behavioral disorder affecting 5% of children and 2.5% of
47 logic (aHR, 0.7 [95% CI, 0.4-1.3]) or mental/behavioral disorders (aHR, 0.8 [95% CI, 0.5-1.2]) compar
48  Checklist (BPSC) can identify indicators of behavioral disorders among children aged 0 to 18 months.
49 a clear link between Internet addiction as a behavioral disorder and aberrant connectivity in the res
50 contribute to early disease symptoms such as behavioral disorder and cognitive decline.
51 pplementation experiment also attenuated the behavioral disorders and AB accumulation in the AD mice
52 e the prevention of later neurocognitive and behavioral disorders and allow the establishment of indi
53 d encopresis) and NNVD, associations between behavioral disorders and bowel disorders as reflected by
54 ventricular transplantation of MSCs improved behavioral disorders and decreased the count of Abeta pl
55 gical link between inner ear dysfunction and behavioral disorders and how sensory abnormalities can c
56 strengthen the link between food allergy and behavioral disorders and identify a population(s) with s
57 omatic anomalies, learning disabilities, and behavioral disorders and is associated with a microdelet
58 apeutic efficacy of Ptzyme@D-ZIF in reducing behavioral disorders and pathological changes.
59                                              Behavioral disorders and substance use disorders were th
60                     All have GDD/ID, mood or behavioral disorders, and dysmorphic features; 9/11 have
61 such as heart attacks), injuries, mental and behavioral disorders, and immune-related diseases such a
62 apeutic approach for treating stress-induced behavioral disorders, and that dynamics are a critical a
63 a, mild to moderate intellectual disability, behavioral disorders, and variable facial dysmorphism.
64  1.39; 95% CI, 1.19-1.61) or psychiatric and behavioral disorders (aOR, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.36-1.83) alon
65  Adults with both eczema and psychiatric and behavioral disorders (aOR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.57-2.93) had
66               The mechanisms underlying this behavioral disorder are largely unknown.
67  diseases and human conditions, particularly behavioral disorders, are rated on ordinal scales.
68 impaired social cognition in I-IED and other behavioral disorders as well.
69  sites of potential relevance for health and behavioral disorders associated with ACEs.
70 hese elevated rates and the heterogeneity of behavioral disorders associated with deafness have usual
71 hat ASD can no longer be defined simply as a behavioral disorder, but is in effect a rather complex a
72 ed that ASD is no longer defined simply as a behavioral disorder, but rather as a highly complex and
73 ian and complex traits, including immune and behavioral disorders, but the study of the mechanisms by
74 .002 vs. 11.6%, p < .001), and any mental or behavioral disorder by the age of 13.1 to 16.8 years (25
75 a related subset of streptococcal-associated behavioral disorders called "pediatric autoimmune neurop
76 rdiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative and behavioral disorders, cancers, diabetes, obesity, catara
77 eurons in the lateral amygdala and develop a behavioral disorder characterized by a deficient respons
78     Speech-sound disorder (SSD) is a complex behavioral disorder characterized by speech-sound produc
79 (BCG) expressing RSV nucleoprotein prevented behavioral disorders, corroborating the specific effect
80 tal hypotheses and models of the etiology of behavioral disorders, defining boundaries of genetic and
81 ort for risk of cancer, epilepsy, mental and behavioral disorders, dementia, depression, school start
82 Primary outcome was any childhood mental and behavioral disorder diagnosed in public specialized medi
83                             Child mental and behavioral disorder diagnoses until age 8.4-12.8 years c
84 or determining why multiple neurological and behavioral disorders differentially affect males and fem
85                               Many brain and behavioral disorders differentially affect men and women
86 , Tenth Revision code for "mental health and behavioral disorder due to opioid use" (F11).
87 rrhosis of the liver (23.7%), and mental and behavioral disorders due to alcohol (7.9%).
88                                              Behavioral disorders, emotional disorders, and comorbidi
89 1, F84.5, F84.8, and F84.9) and other mental/behavioral disorders (ICD-8 codes 290-315 and ICD-10 cod
90 ation disorder, intellectual disability, and behavioral disorder, identified using validated algorith
91 ssociated with higher risk of any mental and behavioral disorder in the entire cohort of children (12
92 was significantly associated with mental and behavioral disorders in children.
93                  Other post-stroke emotional/behavioral disorders include mania, bipolar disorder, an
94 the mPFC have been implicated in a number of behavioral disorders including addiction, studies were t
95 oadly implicated in mediating stress-induced behavioral disorders including major depressive disorder
96  and fragile X syndromes, as well as complex behavioral disorders including schizophrenia, depression
97 erizes subjects with frontal lobe damage and behavioral disorders including substance abuse.
98 tion is implicated in a variety of cognitive/behavioral disorders, including addiction and attention
99 ion syndromes often display hearing loss and behavioral disorders, including ADHD and anxiety-related
100  patients suffer from mental retardation and behavioral disorders, including heightened anxiety and s
101 disrupted social homeostasis, underlies many behavioral disorders, including problematic drug use.
102 s been implicated in various psychiatric and behavioral disorders, including schizophrenia, bipolar d
103   Disruption of this interaction may lead to behavioral disorders, including schizophrenia.
104 eft the association between food allergy and behavioral disorders inconclusive.
105 .06; 95% CI, 1.01-1.12); and childhood-onset behavioral disorders (IRR, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.05-1.18).
106  After adjustment for baseline emotional and behavioral disorders, irritability in adolescence predic
107         In this mouse, a distinct compulsive behavioral disorder is associated with mutant microglia.
108 he brain results in intellectual disability, behavioral disorders, language delay, and seizures.
109 d increasing vulnerability for cognitive and behavioral disorders later in life.
110 onomic features, previously rarely described behavioral disorders, movement disorders and periventric
111 s associated with a higher risk of mental or behavioral disorders (n = 641 487 children; aHR, 1.47 [9
112 rug therapy, the other post-stroke emotional/behavioral disorders need to be evaluated in controlled
113 lsivity and inattention that accompany other behavioral disorders, neurological conditions, and disab
114                       Numerous emotional and behavioral disorders occur following cerebrovascular les
115 White participants had 1.6 times the odds of behavioral disorders (odds ratio, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.27-1.9
116 order (ADHD [MIM 143465]) is the most common behavioral disorder of childhood.
117                 Frontotemporal dementia is a behavioral disorder of insidious onset and variable prog
118 ractivity disorder is one of the most common behavioral disorders of childhood and is frequently asse
119 of children, making it among the more common behavioral disorders of childhood.
120 ptomatology, including neurodegenerative and behavioral disorders (Parkinson disease, Alzheimer disea
121 , 1.11; 95% CI, 1.09-1.12) and mental health/behavioral disorders (RR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.33-1.41).
122 regulation may account for the appearance of behavioral disorders such as anxiety, aggression, and co
123 of obesity, increases the risk of developing behavioral disorders such as anxiety.
124 ed risk of maternal depression and childhood behavioral disorders such as attention-deficit hyperacti
125  is linked to cancer, obesity, diabetes, and behavioral disorders such as autism and bipolar disease.
126                                    For human behavioral disorders such as schizophrenia and autism, t
127 etection of susceptibility genes for complex behavioral disorders such as schizophrenia.
128 Nf1) increase vulnerability to cognitive and behavioral disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder a
129 deep brain stimulation for treating mood and behavioral disorders, such as major depression, obsessiv
130  habitual behaviors has been associated with behavioral disorders, such as obsessive-compulsive disor
131 mporal dementia (FTD) is a neurodegenerative behavioral disorder that selectively affects the salienc
132 o be a primary pathogenic target for several behavioral disorders that arise during development, incl
133 tellectual disability, ataxia, epilepsy, and behavioral disorders that cannot currently be managed by
134                There is a high prevalence of behavioral disorders that feature hyperactivity in indiv
135 sly unknown biological mechanisms underlying behavioral disorders that may point to new therapeutic a
136  through or shared with neurologic or mental/behavioral disorders, thereby providing insights into th
137     Identification of risk alleles for human behavioral disorders through genomewide association stud
138 ntify candidate genes for complex mental and behavioral disorders through inclusion of environmental
139 eminine: AOR, 5.61 [95% CI, 4.16-7.57]); and behavioral disorders (transmasculine: AOR, 4.50 [95% CI,
140 task correlates well with the characteristic behavioral disorders used to clinically diagnose spatial
141  cumulative incidence rate of any mental and behavioral disorder was also significantly higher for th
142                           Substance use plus behavioral disorders was the most common comorbid profil
143                                        The 3 behavioral disorders were associated with 5-15 years of
144 on disorders, intellectual disabilities, and behavioral disorders were identified based on validated
145 lly promoted BDNF expression and rescued the behavioral disorders which were caused by CRS.
146 ity and disturbances of attention are common behavioral disorders whose underlying cellular and neura
147 07 to estimate the association of mental and behavioral disorders with death.
148 sorder continues to be a prevalent childhood behavioral disorder, with significant clinical and media
149 ed genes, and enriched in neurodevelopmental/behavioral disorders, with some showing interindividual

 
Page Top