3 results match your criteria: "WA Institute for Medical Research[Affiliation]"
Cerebrovasc Dis
February 2015
Western Australian Centre for Healthy Ageing (WACHA), Centre for Medical Research, WA Institute for Medical Research, Perth, W.A., Australia.
Background: Population-based studies, as well as clinicians, often rely on self-report and hospital records to obtain a history of stroke. This study aimed to compare the validity of the diagnosis of stroke by self-report and by hospital coding according to their cross-sectional association with prevalent vascular risk factors, and longitudinal association with recurrent stroke and major cardiovascular outcomes in a large cohort of older Australian men.
Methods: Between 1996 and 1999, 11,745 older men were surveyed for a self-reported history of stroke as part of the Health in Men Study (HIMS).
Cancer Sci
September 2007
School of Surgery and Pathology, WA Institute for Medical Research, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Nedlands 6009, Australia.
Hypermethylation of CpG island loci within gene promoter regions is a frequent event in colorectal cancer that is often associated with transcriptional silencing and has been referred to as CIMP+. DNA hypomethylation can occur in concert with CIMP+, although these two phenomena appear not to be related in colorectal cancer. The authors investigated here whether the methylation level of LINE-1 repeats, a surrogate marker for genomic methylation, was associated with the level of CpG island methylation in colorectal cancers and in matching normal colonic mucosa from 178 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bone Miner Res
November 2000
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, The University of Western Australia, WA Institute for Medical Research, QEII Medical Center, Nedlands, Australia.
A complementary DNA (cDNA) encoding the rat homologue of receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand/osteoprotegerin ligand/osteoclast differentiation factor/tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related activation-induced cytokine (RANKL/OPGL/ODF/TRANCE) was cloned and sequenced from tibias of ovariectomized (OVX) rats. The predicted amino acid sequence of rat RANKL (rRANKL) has 84% and 96% identity to that of human and mouse RANKL, respectively, and 35% and 37% similarity to that of human and mouse TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), respectively. RANKL transcripts were expressed abundantly in the thymus and bone tissues of OVX rats.
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