4 results match your criteria: "Howard Univ. College of Medicine[Affiliation]"

Anatomical networks reveal the musculoskeletal modularity of the human head.

Sci Rep

February 2015

Theoretical Biology Research Group, Cavanilles Institute of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, University of Valencia, 46071 Valencia, Spain.

Mosaic evolution is a key mechanism that promotes robustness and evolvability in living beings. For the human head, to have a modular organization would imply that each phenotypic module could grow and function semi-independently. Delimiting the boundaries of head modules, and even assessing their existence, is essential to understand human evolution.

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Impact of perceived racial discrimination on health screening in black women.

J Health Care Poor Underserved

February 2010

Department of Community and Family Medicine, Howard Univ. College of Medicine, 520 W Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20059, USA.

Perceived discrimination has been shown to be related to health screening behavior. The present study examines the effect of discrimination on cancer screening among women in the Black Women's Health Study. Five self-report items measured discrimination in everyday life and three items measured experiences of major discrimination.

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A central neuronal network that regulates respiration may include hypothalamic neurons that produce orexin, a peptide that influences sleep and arousal. In these experiments, we investigated 1) projections of orexin-containing neurons to the pre-Botzinger region of the rostral ventrolateral medulla that regulates rhythmic breathing and to phrenic motoneurons that innervate the diaphragm; 2) the presence of orexin A receptors in the pre-Botzinger region and in phrenic motoneurons; and 3) physiological effects of orexin administered into the pre-Botzinger region and phrenic nuclei at the C3-C4 levels. We found orexin-containing fibers within the pre-Botzinger complex.

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In ferrets, we investigated the presence of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), and markers for nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in preganglionic parasympathetic neurons innervating extrathoracic trachea and intrapulmonary airways. Cholera toxin beta-subunit, a retrograde axonal transganglionic tracer, was used to identify airway-related vagal preganglionic neurons. Double-labeling immunohistochemistry and confocal microscopy were employed to characterize the chemical nature of identified airway-related vagal preganglionic neurons at a single cell level.

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