Results 161 to 170 of about 151,651 (216)
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GAGs and GAGs Diseases: When Pathophysiology Supports the Clinic

Urologia Journal, 2013
The urinary epithelium has been the subject of considerable interest and much research in recent years. What has radically changed in the last decade is the concept of what the bladder epithelium really is. It is currently no longer considered just a simple barrier and a non-specific defence against infections, and it has been recognized as a ...
COSTANTINI, Elisabetta   +2 more
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Glycosaminoglycan (GAG) Biosynthesis and GAG-Binding Proteins

2010
Two major types of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) polysaccharides, heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate, are polymerized and modified by enzymes that are encoded by more than 40 genes in animal cells. Because of the expression repertoire of the GAG assembly and modification enzymes, each heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate chain has a sulfation pattern,
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Gag control

British Dental Journal, 2023
N A, Sudharson   +3 more
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Gagging for it

BMJ, 2009
First, the good news on transparency. Drug company Merck is following Eli Lilly’s lead by publishing details of fees paid to experts for speaking on behalf of the company or its products (doi:10.1136/bmj.b4409). GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer have promised to follow suit.
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Gagging on it?

BMJ, 2010
Tony Delamothe’s editor’s choice highlighted articles by Jonathan Gornall and Jane Cassidy that show the dangers of employers gagging doctors from raising serious concerns about patient safety.1 2 3 He observed that “George Orwell would have savoured the designation of these [employing authorities] as ‘trusts’.” The two articles show trusts behaving ...
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Gag reflex and dysphagia

Head & Neck, 1996
The gag reflex is a protective response that prevents foreign objects or noxious material from entering the pharynx, larynx, or trachea; it is not elicited during a normal swallow. Although no data have been reported to support a relationship between the gag reflex and dysphagia, the gag reflex is nevertheless routinely assessed during the bedside ...
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Gagging in dental radiography

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1984
The frequency of gagging during full-mouth radiography was evaluated in 478 patients. Gagging was observed in 13% of the patients. The frequency of gagging differed significantly in groups radiographed by trained radiographers and by students (9% and 26%, respectively).
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Gagging.

The New York state dental journal, 2011
Gagging is a protective reflex to stop unwanted entry into the mouth and oropharynx. Some people have a reduced or absent reflex, while others have a pronounced one. Pronounced gag reflexes can compromise all aspects of dentistry, from the diagnostic procedures of examination and radiography to any form of active treatment. In some patients with marked
Satheesh, Kumar   +2 more
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