Results 171 to 180 of about 46,697 (194)
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A microparticle plasma

Canadian Journal of Physics, 1968
A study is made of a cloud composed of microparticles which are individually either positively or negatively charged. The plasma definitions that the total charge of the cloud is zero and the shielding distance is small compared to the dimensions of the system are taken to be satisfied.
C. R. James, F. Vermeulen
openaire   +2 more sources

Microparticles and thrombotic disease

Current Opinion in Hematology, 2009
In recent years, the biological importance of cell-derived microparticles has emerged. However, even without standard protocols for their analysis, the role of microparticles in hemostasis and thrombosis is evident, particularly in cancer patients.When found in the blood in high numbers, microparticles are prothrombotic.
Pavel Davizon, José A. López
openaire   +3 more sources

Microparticles and infectious diseases

Médecine et Maladies Infectieuses, 2012
Membrane shedding with microvesicle (MV) release after membrane budding due to cell stimulation is a highly conserved intercellular interplay. MV can be released by micro-organisms or by host cells in the course of infectious diseases. Host MVs are divided according to cell compartment origin in microparticles (MPs) from plasma membrane and exosomes ...
Ferhat Meziani   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Microparticles and Arterial Disease

Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis, 2009
Microparticles (MPs) are small (diameter
Andrew D. Blann   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Voltammetry of Organic Microparticles

Mikrochimica Acta, 1999
Solid microparticles of several different insoluble organic compounds were mechanically immobilized on the surface of graphite electrodes and immersed into a liquid electrolyte in order to stady their electrochemical reactions. Cyclic staircase voltammetry and square-wave voltammetry were used.
Valentin Mirčeski   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Microparticles and placental hemostasis

Thrombosis Research, 2009
Pregnancy is an acquired hypercoagulable state, with gestational vascular complications (GVC) including preeclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), pregnancy loss and placental abruption being a major cause of maternal morbidity and fetal mortality.
Benjamin Brenner, Anat Aharon
openaire   +3 more sources

Microparticles, thrombosis and cancer

Best Practice & Research Clinical Haematology, 2009
Microvesicles comprised of exosomes and microparticles are shed from both normal and malignant cells upon cell activation or apoptosis. Microvesicles promote clot formation, mediate pro-inflammatory processes, facilitate cell-to-cell interactions, transfer proteins and mRNA to cells, and induce cell signalling. Microparticles bearing tissue factor play
Benjamin Brenner, Anat Aharon
openaire   +3 more sources

Placenta-derived microparticles

Thrombosis Research, 2013
Microparticles (MPs), sub-micron membrane vesicles, participate in the placental and maternal crosstalk in normal pregnancies as well as in gestational vascular complications (GVC). The article will review the effects of MPs on placental physiological processes, including hemostasis, trophoblast migration, invasion, placental vasculature and their ...
Anat Aharon, Benjamin Brenner
openaire   +2 more sources

Microparticles (Exosomes) and Atherosclerosis

Current Atherosclerosis Reports, 2020
This review summarizes the effects of microparticles and exosomes in the progression of atherosclerosis and the prospect for their diagnostic and therapeutic potentials.Microparticles and exosomes can induce endothelial dysfunction, vascular inflammation, coagulation, thrombosis, and calcification via their components of proteins and noncoding RNAs ...
Zhi-Jun Ou   +3 more
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The microbubble or the microparticle?

Journal of Applied Physiology, 2011
decompression sickness (DCS) has long been attributed to physical forces exerted by inert gas bubbles that may form in tissues, resulting in vascular occlusion and tissue disruption. Bubble formation occurs when a decrease in ambient pressure exceeds the rate at which soluble inert gas (e.g.,
Martha Sue Carraway, Nigel S. Key
openaire   +2 more sources

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