4 results match your criteria: "Università di Rome "Sapienza"[Affiliation]"

Tuberculosis remains one of the world's deadliest infectious diseases, accounting for nearly 1.3 million deaths every year. Tuberculosis treatment is challenging because of the toxicity, decreased bioavailability at the target site of the conventional drugs and, most importantly, low adherence of patients; this leads to drug resistance.

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Higher-order corrections to the effective potential close to the jamming transition in the perceptron model.

Phys Rev E

January 2018

Dipartimento di Fisica, Sapienza Università  di Roma, Piazzale A. Moro 2, I-00185, Rome, Italy and LPTMS, CNRS, Univ. Paris-Sud, Université Paris-Saclay, 91405 Orsay, France.

In view of the results achieved in a previously related work [A. Altieri, S. Franz, and G.

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Thalamic fractional anisotropy predicts accrual of cerebral white matter damage in older subjects with small-vessel disease.

J Cereb Blood Flow Metab

August 2014

Center for Neurological Imaging, Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

White matter hyperintensities (WMHs) and lacunes are magnetic resonance imaging hallmarks of cerebral small-vessel disease, which increase the risk of stroke, cognitive, and mobility impairment. Although most studies of cerebral small-vessel disease have focused on white matter abnormalities, the gray matter (GM) is also affected, as evidenced by frequently observed lacunes in subcortical GM. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is sensitive to subtle neurodegenerative changes in deep GM structures.

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