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Nitric Oxide and Angiogenesis

Journal of Neuro-Oncology, 2000
The steps required for new vessel growth are biologically complex and require coordinate regulation of contributing components, including modifications of cell--cell interactions, proliferation and migration of endothelial cells and matrix degradation.
Ziche, Marina, Morbidelli, Lucia
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Detection of nitric oxide and nitric oxide synthases in psoriasis

Archives of Dermatological Research, 1998
Biopsies from psoriasis lesions and clinically uninvolved skin of eight patients and five normal subjects were studied by immunocytochemistry with computerized image analysis for the presence of endothelial, neuronal and inducible isoforms of nitric oxide synthase.
A D, Ormerod   +6 more
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Multimodality imaging of nitric oxide and nitric oxide synthases

Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2009
Nitric oxide (NO) and NO synthases (NOSs) are crucial factors in many pathophysiological processes such as inflammation, vascular/neurological function, and many types of cancer. Noninvasive imaging of NO or NOS can provide new insights in understanding these diseases and facilitate the development of novel therapeutic strategies.
Hao, Hong, Jiangtao, Sun, Weibo, Cai
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Nitric oxide

European Journal of Pediatrics, 1994
Although persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) has been considered to be a relatively rare condition, there is increasing evidence that pulmonary vasoconstriction is a common finding in moderate and severe respiratory distress syndrome.
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Nitric oxide and nitric oxide synthase activity in plants

Phytochemistry, 2004
Research on NO in plants has gained considerable attention in recent years mainly due to its function in plant growth and development and as a key signalling molecule in different intracellular processes in plants. The NO emission from plants is known since the 1970s, and now there is abundant information on the multiple effects of exogenously applied ...
Luis A, del Río   +2 more
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Sepsis and Nitric Oxide

1996
Sepsis or the septic syndrome is the number one cause of mortality in todays intensive care. Overall mortality of sepsis is estimated to be 40 to 60% and when shock or organ failure is present mortality rate is even higher despite recent progress in antibiotic and vasopressor therapy (Bone et al. 1991).
Avontuur, J, Bruining, HA, Ince, Can
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Nitric Oxide and Memory

The Neuroscientist, 2004
Nitric oxide (NO) is widely used in neural circuits giving rise to learning and memory. NO is an unusual neurotransmitter in its modes of release and action. Is its association with learning and memory related to its unusual properties? Reviewing the literature might allow the formulation of a general principle on how NO and memory are related ...
Abraham J, Susswein   +3 more
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Nitric Oxide

The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1993
Nitric oxide is a newly discovered gas that mediates communication between adjacent cells and signals inside cells. Defects in the nitric oxide signalling cascade have been found in patients with systemic hypertension, pulmonary hypertension, and coronary artery disease. High concentrations of nitric oxide are cytotoxic. Over-production of nitric oxide
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Nitric Oxide in the Airways

The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice, 2007
This review briefly explains the basic facts about nitric oxide, which is entering clinical practice as a measure of lower airways inflammation and is likely also to be employed in otorhinolaryngological practice.These include the validity of nasal nitric oxide in diagnosing primary ciliary dyskinesia and in monitoring the response to chronic ...
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Nitric Oxide in Seawater

Science, 1980
Nitrite photolysis at natural light intensities and normal nitrite concentrations in seawater produced detectable concentrations of nitric oxide, which was consumed rapidly by a dark chemical reaction in the laboratory. Nitric oxide was also detected in situ in nitrite-rich surface waters of the central equatorial Pacific, where it formed in daylight ...
O C, Zafiriou   +2 more
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