7 results match your criteria: "Washington University in St. Louis Saint Louis[Affiliation]"

Bladder Health Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs among US Adolescent Women.

J Pediatr Adolesc Gynecol

October 2024

University of Michigan School of Nursing, Women's and Gender Studies, Dept. Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Article Synopsis
  • The study looked at how young girls aged 11 to 17 understand their bladder health and issues they might face.
  • It found that many don't know much about how their bladder works and what healthy habits are, even though they're aware of some behaviors.
  • The researchers believe that social pressures and feelings of shame affect how these girls take care of their bladder health, and suggest more education and support is needed to help them.
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Severe musculoskeletal diseases, such as those associated with congenital or traumatic events, that result in missing limbs may compromise the fitness and survival of free-living felids. Here we report the space use of four amputee individuals from three felid species captured from 2017 to 2022 in Missouri (USA), Toledo and Badajoz (Spain), and Suitai Khairkhan Mountain (Mongolia). We describe home ranges and daily travel distances post-release of free-living felids that had either suffered a traumatic amputation or following a surgical amputation.

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Objective: Whether activation or inhibition of the mTOR pathway is beneficial to ischemic injury remains controversial. It may result from the different reaction of ischemic penumbra and core to modulation of mTOR pathway after cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury in rats.

Methods: Longa's middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) method was conducted to induce the focal cerebral ischemia-reperfusion.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding treefall disturbances in Amazonian forests helps us learn about species coexistence and predict future ecosystem changes.
  • A study analyzed forests with different functional compositions, comparing their responses to treefalls by examining stem diversity and composition in both disturbed and undisturbed areas.
  • Results showed a slight increase in stem numbers and alpha-diversity after disturbances, but these changes were minimal (2-4%) and consistent across various forest types, indicating that treefall events have a limited impact on overall forest diversity.
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Microbial fatty acids preserve metabolic and environmental information in their hydrogen isotope ratios ((2)H/(1)H). This ratio is influenced by parameters that include the (2)H/(1)H of water in the microbial growth environment, and biosynthetic fractionations between water and lipid. In some microbes, this biosynthetic fractionation has been shown to vary systematically with central energy metabolism, and controls on fatty acid (2)H/(1)H may be linked to the intracellular production of NADPH.

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This work is to determine whether apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype modulates the effect of cholinesterase inhibitor (ChEI) treatment on resting state functional connectivity magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fcMRI) in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD). We retrospectively studied very mild and mild AD participants who were treated (N=25) or untreated (N=19) with ChEIs with respect to rs-fcMRI measure of 5 resting state networks (RSNs): default mode, dorsal attention (DAN), control (CON), salience (SAL), and sensory motor. For each network, a composite score was computed as the mean of Pearson correlations between pairwise time courses extracted from areas comprising this network.

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Article Synopsis
  • Microorganisms can convert cheap carbon sources into valuable compounds without harmful by-products or high energy costs.
  • By modifying natural biosynthetic pathways in suitable microorganisms, it’s possible to produce complex compounds used in various industries, including medicine.
  • The review highlights how synthetic biology tools enhance the efficiency and range of isoprenoid production for health applications, promising better yields and new medically relevant compounds.
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