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Genetic diversity and mating system in Stylosanthes spp. as revealed by microsatellite markers
Santos-Garcia, Melissa de Oliveira, 1980-
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Genetic Markers of Spina Bifida in an Indian Cohort.
Goel P +9 more
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Genetic Markers in Psychiatry.
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 2019Psychiatric disorders such as addiction (substance use and addictive disorders), depression, eating disorders, schizophrenia, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are severe, complex, multifactorial mental disorders that carry a high social impact, enormous public health costs, and various comorbidities as well as premature morbidity.
G. Nedić Erjavec +5 more
semanticscholar +3 more sources
Current Opinion in Biotechnology, 1991
Advances in our understanding of polymorphisms found in eukaryotic genomes and improved methods for studying genetic markers should facilitate genetic linkage mapping and other applications. Progress within the past year includes characterization of the types, frequencies, and properties of tandemly repeated sequences, methods for obtaining the DNA ...
A, Edwards, C T, Caskey
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Advances in our understanding of polymorphisms found in eukaryotic genomes and improved methods for studying genetic markers should facilitate genetic linkage mapping and other applications. Progress within the past year includes characterization of the types, frequencies, and properties of tandemly repeated sequences, methods for obtaining the DNA ...
A, Edwards, C T, Caskey
openaire +2 more sources
Beyond genetic markers: hypertension genes
Journal of Hypertension, 1994The dissection of the molecular genetics of hypertension is both a complex multidisciplinary challenge and a medical imperative. The Identification of hypertension genes will allow the dissection of etiologic mechanisms: the primary gene dysfunctions, gene interaction, and gene and environmental factor interaction, thus unravelling the heterogeneous ...
V L, Herrera, N, Ruiz-Opazo
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Journal of the American College of Surgeons, 2001
Sepsis is a systemic response to severe infection. Clinical sepsis is defined as an infection-induced syndrome including at least two of the features of systemic inflammatory response syndrome: fever or hypothermia (oral temperature .38°C or ,36°C); leukocytosis (.12,000 WBC/mm) or leukopenia (,4,000 WBC/ mm); tachycardia (heart rate .90 beats/minute);
A R, Tabrizi +3 more
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Sepsis is a systemic response to severe infection. Clinical sepsis is defined as an infection-induced syndrome including at least two of the features of systemic inflammatory response syndrome: fever or hypothermia (oral temperature .38°C or ,36°C); leukocytosis (.12,000 WBC/mm) or leukopenia (,4,000 WBC/ mm); tachycardia (heart rate .90 beats/minute);
A R, Tabrizi +3 more
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The Lancet, 1984
Narcolepsy has long been known to have a hereditary familial basis. All of 37 patients with narcolepsy expressed the major histocompatibility complex antigen HLA DR2 compared with 21.5% of 200 normal controls. This finding confirms the genetic basis for the disease, and furthermore links it with the short arm of chromosome 6.
N, Langdon +4 more
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Narcolepsy has long been known to have a hereditary familial basis. All of 37 patients with narcolepsy expressed the major histocompatibility complex antigen HLA DR2 compared with 21.5% of 200 normal controls. This finding confirms the genetic basis for the disease, and furthermore links it with the short arm of chromosome 6.
N, Langdon +4 more
openaire +2 more sources

