3 results match your criteria: "State Institution Research Center for Radiation Medicine[Affiliation]"
J Ophthalmol
October 2015
Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine, Albert Szent-Györgyi Clinical Center, University of Szeged, Korányi fasor Ulica 10-11, 6720 Szeged, Hungary ; Stem Cells and Eye Research Laboratory, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Debrecen, Egyetem Téren 1, 4032 Debrecen, Hungary.
Purpose. Choroidal neovascularization (CNV) is one of the most common complications of retinal diseases accompanied by elevated secretion of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Intravitreal anti-VEGFs (ranibizumab, bevacizumab, pegaptanib, and aflibercept) can suppress neovascularization, decrease vascular permeability and CNV size, and, thereby, improve visual function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Prot Dosimetry
June 2009
State Institution Research Center for Radiation Medicine, Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine, Melnikov Street 53, Kiev 04050, Ukraine.
After the Chernobyl accident, the Research Center for Radiation Medicine (RCRM) was established in Kiev (Ukraine). Its main task was to maintain a high level of emergency preparedness and be ready to examine and treat patients who suffer as a result of hypothetical radiation accident. Based on the previous experience, this institution's specialists worked out new diagnostic criteria and drug treatment schemata for acute radiation sickness, created a database on 75 patients with this diagnosis and improved educational programmes for medical students and physicians working in the field of radiation medicine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci
April 2009
Department of Radiation Psychoneurology, State Institution Research Center for Radiation Medicine, Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine, 53 Melnikov St., Kiev 04050, Ukraine.
One hundred children, exposed prenatally to radiation after the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident, and 50 nonexposed classmates were examined between the ages of 11 and 13 years old using neuropsychiatric tests, WISC, EEG, and visual evoked potentials. Individual prenatal radiation doses were reconstructed for all examined children. The exposed children were found to have more neuropsychiatric disorders, left-brain neurological signs, lower full-scale and verbal IQ, IQ discrepancies with verbal decrement, disorganized EEG patterns, an excess of lateralized-to-left frontotemporal region delta and beta power with depression of theta and alpha power, and interhemispheric inversion visual information processing.
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