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1 here in the lung while the patient is freely breathing.
2 tivated immediately after birth and supports breathing.
3 sleep apnea (OSA), a widespread disorder of breathing.
4 unction parameters were clear during resting breathing.
5 right CSR, and 297 patients (52%) had normal breathing.
6 ve decline in patients with sleep-disordered breathing.
7 mimic the shear stress associated with tidal breathing.
8 oxygen, carbon dioxide, and pH, and regulate breathing.
9 is necessary for the chemosensory control of breathing.
10 RSA) while estimating the resting f(H) while breathing.
11 te disodium and gadoterate meglumine at free breathing.
12 3-targeted shRNA survived with no changes in breathing.
13 ngle radial sparse parallel sequence at free breathing.
14 iratory muscle adaptations to disruptions in breathing.
15 a novel pharmacological strategy to improve breathing.
16 d DS patients' frequently exhibit disordered breathing.
17 nt for sleep-wake state-dependent control of breathing.
18 the remarkable robustness and flexibility of breathing.
19 lasticity may be a novel strategy to improve breathing.
20 icular networks of the medulla that generate breathing.
21 lation of either RTN or C1 neurons activates breathing.
22 rom appetite and digestion to heart rate and breathing.
23 f inspiratory flow around 1.0L/s due to rest breathing.
24 val {CI}: 0.007, -0.024]; rho = 0.97 vs free breathing, -0.004 [95% CI: 0.007, -0.016]; rho = 0.91).
26 diaphragmatic contraction during spontaneous breathing, 2) reduce expiratory flow and make lung compa
27 icantly lower in the HD patients during deep breathing (3.686 +/- 1.567 cm/s vs. 4.410 +/- 1.720 cm/s
28 s and Methods A heart rate-independent, free-breathing 3D T2 mapping technique at 3.0 T that can be c
33 -T MRI scanner and compared with a fast free-breathing acquisition technique for ADC mapping (approxi
34 antitative parameter maps from a single free-breathing acquisition with the potential to reduce exam
35 expiratory pressure both without spontaneous breathing activity (0.029 [0.027-0.030] vs 0.044 [0.041-
36 .041-0.065]; p = 0.004) and with spontaneous breathing activity (0.032 [0.028-0.043] vs 0.057 [0.042-
37 oups (n = 6/group; 12 hr): 1) no spontaneous breathing activity and positive end-expiratory pressure
38 atory pressure - 4 cm H2O, 2) no spontaneous breathing activity and positive end-expiratory pressure
39 piratory pressure + 4 cm H2O, 3) spontaneous breathing activity and positive end-expiratory pressure
40 piratory pressure + 4 cm H2O, 4) spontaneous breathing activity and positive end-expiratory pressure
46 this technique on a healthy human volunteer breathing along different respiratory patterns during th
47 umonia (cough lasting <14 days or difficulty breathing, along with visible indrawing of the chest wal
48 ere measured continuously during ambient air breathing (Amb) and a 6 min inhalation of the vasodilato
49 nputs to mediate inspiratory activity during breathing and are constrained to fire in a pattern that
52 We hypothesized that during both spontaneous breathing and controlled mechanical ventilation, externa
53 ne of these substitutions increased envelope breathing and decreased scavenger receptor class B type
55 ation was mostly at birth with hypotonia and breathing and feeding difficulties often requiring venti
56 decreased from 24% to 16% during spontaneous breathing and from 32% to 18% during controlled mechanic
57 ptin acts on LepR(b) in the CBs to stimulate breathing and HVR, which may protect against sleep disor
59 with 394 (281, 554) kcal/d in spontaneously breathing and mechanically ventilated patients, respecti
60 with 639 (479, 723) kcal/d in spontaneously breathing and mechanically ventilated patients, respecti
61 spectively (P = 0.949).Both in spontaneously breathing and mechanically ventilated patients, the best
64 -related disparities center on sleep-related breathing and medication use, and racial disparities rel
66 assess associations between sleep-disordered breathing and outcomes, adjusted for sociodemographics,
70 "6-foot rule." Here we analyze flows during breathing and speaking, including phonetic features, usi
72 the amplitude of nucleosome motions such as breathing and twisting are enhanced in nucleosomes with
74 alveolar ventilation, both during unassisted breathing and with different modes of ventilatory assist
75 lness technique - focused attention on one's breathing - and assessed its potential to train an atten
76 st is the unexpected loss of heart function, breathing, and consciousness and is commonly the result
78 case during normal breathing, talking, deep breathing, and coughing.Conclusions: Oxygen delivery mod
82 ciency improvements limited by difficulty in breathing, and no safe reusability), which have yet to b
83 ical stress associated with sleep-disordered breathing, and this measure predicts incident cardiovasc
84 not associated with birth weight, difficulty breathing, apnea or upper or lower respiratory infection
85 and phase difference around the frequency of breathing (approximately 0.3 Hz) and around the frequenc
86 nical signs of insomnia and sleep-disordered breathing are common in mid-to-late pregnancy, but most
88 rature-dependent neutralization (e.g., virus breathing) assays indicated that both HVR1 and protectiv
89 f a peptidergic neural circuit that supports breathing at a particularly vulnerable period in life.
93 rorespirator and a smoke machine to simulate breathing behavior and smoking topography parameters suc
97 s in MOFs, however, typically refers to the "breathing" behavior of cavities, where pores open and cl
99 gmatic pressure decreased during spontaneous breathing by >10%, 2) expiratory flow was reduced and th
103 rpretation of PPV is unreliable (spontaneous breathing, cardiac arrhythmias) or doubtful (low Vt).
104 These changes implicate the brainstem's breathing circuitry which we confirm by locally eliminat
105 cleus (RTN) and adjacent C1 neurons regulate breathing, circulation and the state of vigilance, but p
106 by the purely mechanosensitive dynamics (to breathing clean air) nor by the response amplitudes acro
107 ury had significantly worse patient-reported breathing (Clinical Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseas
108 eased markedly by 138+/-71% ( P<0.001) after breathing CO gas, 2.8 times more than the increase induc
110 t agents, gadoxetate and gadoterate, at free-breathing conditions potentially leads to respiratory ir
114 Growing evidence supports the Awakening and Breathing Coordination, Delirium monitoring/management,
117 posing healthy males to 40 consecutive 1 min breathing cycles, each comprising 40 s of hypercapnic hy
118 eurones resulted in attenuation of irregular breathing, decreased apnoea-hypopnoea incidence (11.1 +/
119 ating the respiratory rhythm-phenocopied the breathing deficits observed after RTN deletion of PACAP,
122 sal obstruction, and PC2 was associated with breathing difficulties and lean body mass, although EDCs
127 e significantly at the frequency of periodic breathing during acute and sustained normobaric and hypo
128 xia, which likely compensates and stabilizes breathing during injury or disease and has significant t
131 and C1 neurons regulate distinct aspects of breathing (e.g., frequency, amplitude, active expiration
133 ck from lower limbs to modify the EPR, while breathing either ambient air, normocapnic hypoxia (S(a)
134 e conduction, ventilation variables, work of breathing, electrical stimulation variables, stimulation
135 romuscular function significantly influenced breathing endurance, timing and loading compensations.
138 igns; history in the past 24 h of difficulty breathing, fast breathing, runny nose, or nasal congesti
140 ced robust arousals and similar increases in breathing frequency and amplitude compared with RTN stim
143 volume of breaths yet surprisingly increased breathing frequency, often followed by gasping and fatal
144 rotein genes, some expressed specifically in breathing gills of aquatic nymphs, suggesting a novel se
145 ow weight for height, unresponsiveness, deep breathing, hypoxemia, grunting, and the absence of cough
146 es in abdominal MRI have enabled rapid, free-breathing imaging without the need for intravenous or or
147 report direct observation of spontaneous DNA breathing in atomistic molecular dynamics simulations, d
149 these results support the use of spontaneous breathing in patients with acute respiratory distress sy
150 a region that contains neurons that regulate breathing in response to changes in CO(2) /H(+) , has be
153 ia, effects of disease and age on control of breathing, inaccuracy of pulse oximetry at low oxygen sa
154 nts aerosolised coronavirus released through breathing increases the chance of spreading the disease.
158 tic resonance images of 17 nonsedated, quiet-breathing infants with severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia
159 Case patients who did not have difficulty breathing infected 0.05 times as many contacts (95% CI,
160 ibility that arousal-dependent modulation of breathing involves recruitment of cholinergic projection
161 that RVLM-C1 neurones play a pivotal role in breathing irregularities in volume overload HF, and medi
164 on is the standard treatment when volitional breathing is insufficient, but drawbacks include muscle
166 electrode over cycles, termed as mechanical breathing, is a crucial issue limiting the quality and l
167 ucing ICAN is predicted to slow down or stop breathing; its contributions to motor pattern would be r
168 nduced hypoxia in humans evokes a pattern of breathing known as periodic breathing (PB), in which the
170 iquid interfaces, with compression/expansion breathing-like dynamics enhancing rapid interface-assist
171 ses indicated that greater activation during breathing load anticipation was associated with past bul
173 motion face-processing task, (2) inspiratory breathing load task, and (3) fear conditioning and extin
174 gm displacement from quiet breathing to deep breathing ( m) were lower in HD patients than in control
175 ) was higher during breath hold than at free breathing (mean +/- standard deviation in milliliters of
176 cuff BP were recorded before and after slow breathing, mental arithmetic, cold pressor, and sublingu
178 es within the olfactory epithelium in freely breathing mice, we find widespread antagonistic interact
180 bond length change associated with molecular breathing mode can be tracked with a sub-Angstrom resolu
182 oherent phonons are identified: localized 0D breathing modes of isolated superatom, 2D synchronized t
185 pairing is important because the underlying "breathing" motion between the two conformations can sign
186 , together with synchronous and asynchronous breathing motions of the enzyme, underlie allosteric coo
188 ning whether and how the rhythms of limb and breathing movements interact is highly informative about
189 the autonomic nervous system, fetal body and breathing movements, and from baroreflex and circadian p
190 te synthetic MRI ventilation scans from free-breathing MRI (deep learning [DL] ventilation MRI)-deriv
191 work we investigate the use of a novel free-breathing multi-echo Dixon technique for quantitative my
192 ed to observe the DNA of an ensemble of such breathing nucleosomes through x-ray diffraction with con
193 s into the sequence dependence of nucleosome breathing observed in the experiment and allows us to de
194 .96) and was more likely to require assisted breathing (odds ratio, 6.55; 95% CI, 1.17-36.67); depend
195 al [CI]: 1.45 to 10.76; p = 0.007 vs. normal breathing; odds ratio: 4.01; 95% CI: 1.54 to 10.46; p =
196 ifically to a single-stranded region and, on breathing of the inhibitory structure, relocate to the R
197 tween HA head domains; reversible molecular "breathing" of the HA trimer can expose the interface to
199 d cough, runny nose, sore throat, difficulty breathing or myalgia, and collected data on other sympto
200 ignalling in this region influences baseline breathing or the ventilatory response to CO(2) in consci
201 atory conditions probably affecting stamina, breathing, or fatigue (0.75, 0.47-1.19; p=0.220; assesse
203 nce of the external gills that represent key breathing organs of bichir free-living embryos and early
205 fty hemodynamically stable and spontaneously breathing patients equipped with a femoral (n = 21) or r
206 tory network that control the changes in the breathing pattern associated with elevated metabolic dem
211 hare features of chemoreflex-driven clinical breathing patterns that also occur primarily in males, w
212 ystems, baseline wander, normal and abnormal breathing patterns, changes in breathing rate, noise, an
215 kes a pattern of breathing known as periodic breathing (PB), in which the regular oscillations corres
216 nickelates apart from that in cuprates where breathing phonons are not overdamped and point out remar
218 f oral amoxicillin for the treatment of fast-breathing pneumonia in children at the community level.
220 delie penguins and observations of other air-breathing predators (penguins, seals, and whales), all o
222 5%), which was characterized by a history of breathing problems/eczema during infancy and non-respira
226 Net-based DCNN model was trained to map free-breathing proton MRI to hyperpolarized helium 3 ((3)He)
227 etworks generated ventilation maps from free-breathing proton MRI trained with a hyperpolarized noble
229 tivation by VNS: stimulus-elicited change in breathing rate (DeltaBR) and heart rate (DeltaHR), respe
233 creased apnoeas and blunted CO(2)-stimulated breathing; re-expression of PACAP in RTN neurons correct
237 explanation for the acute O(2) regulation of breathing, reveal an unanticipated role of HIF2alpha, an
238 oxygen tension in the brain through carbogen breathing reversed the neuroprotective effects of FLASH,
239 site is the preBotzinger Complex, where the breathing rhythm originates, and use genetic tools to re
242 In sum, stimulating C1 or RTN activates breathing robustly, but only RTN neuron stimulation prod
243 the past 24 h of difficulty breathing, fast breathing, runny nose, or nasal congestion; and current
246 ior studies have found that sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is common among those with left ventricu
253 during behavioral or metabolic challenges to breathing, such as changes in sensory feedback, sighing,
254 dicate eurypterids were capable of subaerial breathing, suggesting that book gills are the direct pre
255 ory distress syndrome model in spontaneously breathing surfactant-deficient newborn piglets to invest
259 ed screening tests such as liquid biopsy and breathing tests may transform the screening landscape.
260 te a robust, contrast agent-unenhanced, free-breathing three-dimensional (3D) cardiac MRI approach fo
261 Changes in diaphragm displacement from quiet breathing to deep breathing ( m) were lower in HD patien
262 [i.e., acid-activated neurons that regulate breathing to maintain a constant arterial PCO(2) (PaCO(2
266 eiving mechanical ventilation, a spontaneous breathing trial consisting of 30 minutes of pressure sup
268 tions of care on compliance with spontaneous breathing trials (odds ratio, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.95-1.07),
270 were measured immediately before spontaneous breathing trials and at 60 minutes after spontaneous bre
273 h respiratory variability during spontaneous breathing trials is independently associated with extuba
274 n saturation (DeltaScvO2) during spontaneous breathing trials were independently associated with extu
275 for lung-protective ventilation, spontaneous breathing trials, and neuromuscular blockade, respective
276 of respiratory variables during spontaneous breathing trials, and the change in airway pressure duri
277 vidence-based processes of care (spontaneous breathing trials, lung-protective ventilation, and neuro
278 venous oxygen saturation, during spontaneous breathing trials, were independent predictors of weaning
281 Spontaneous Awakening Trials and Spontaneous Breathing Trials; "C" for Choice of Analgesia and Sedati
283 mporally and spatially controlled 'chromatin breathing' upon DNA damage, which we demonstrate fosters
286 ustment, diaphragmatic excursion during deep breathing was associated with haemoglobin level (regress
290 of apneic events and the percentage of time breathing was stable (r = -0.66, P = 0.03) during sleep.
291 ry flow around 2.0L/s due to slightly strong breathing were significantly higher than the lung sound
292 OHS in obese patients with sleep-disordered breathing when suspicion for OHS is not very high (<20%)
294 ht phrenic nerves and maintenance of work of breathing within defined limits for 80% of stimulated br