Results 271 to 280 of about 388,370 (312)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Leishmania — A Parasitized Parasite
New England Journal of Medicine, 2011Leishmaniasis can be visceral and deadly or restricted to a cutaneous lesion. A particularly severe form of disease is caused by an unregulated inflammatory response. A recent study suggests that this response may be triggered by a virus that infects the Leishmania parasite.
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2018
For a journal like ebr, long devoted to peer-to-peer reviews (of writers for and by writers), the engagement by Jhave with Sean Braune's Language Parasites suggests a variation on that model. Their parasite-to-parasite encounter bodes well to supplement (if not overtake) the hidden, professionalized peer review models that keeps all of us so busy and ...
JOHNSTON, David Jhave , Braune, Sean
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For a journal like ebr, long devoted to peer-to-peer reviews (of writers for and by writers), the engagement by Jhave with Sean Braune's Language Parasites suggests a variation on that model. Their parasite-to-parasite encounter bodes well to supplement (if not overtake) the hidden, professionalized peer review models that keeps all of us so busy and ...
JOHNSTON, David Jhave , Braune, Sean
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2008
Parasitism is a pervasive phenomenon in nature involving, either as hosts or as parasites, virtually all species on Earth. By definition, parasites are costly for their hosts as they divert resources for their growth, reproduction, and survival with no rewards for the hosts.
Sorci, Gabriele, Garnier, Stéphane
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Parasitism is a pervasive phenomenon in nature involving, either as hosts or as parasites, virtually all species on Earth. By definition, parasites are costly for their hosts as they divert resources for their growth, reproduction, and survival with no rewards for the hosts.
Sorci, Gabriele, Garnier, Stéphane
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Nature, 1970
Platyhelminthes and Parasitism An Introduction to Parasitology. By D. R. R. Burt. Pp. viii + 150 + 11. (English Universities: London, September 1970.) 45s boards; 28s paper.
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Platyhelminthes and Parasitism An Introduction to Parasitology. By D. R. R. Burt. Pp. viii + 150 + 11. (English Universities: London, September 1970.) 45s boards; 28s paper.
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Eicosanoids in parasites and parasitic infections
2000Eicosanoids are lipid mediators with multiple functions in vertebrate tissues and invertebrate organisms. In this review the roles of eicosanoids--mostly prostaglandins (PGs), thromboxanes and leukotrienes--in parasite physiology and host-parasite interactions are discussed. PGs are present in the saliva of blood-sucking arthropods facilitating feeding
A, Daugschies, A, Joachim
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Bacterial parasitization of the parasite.
JAMA, 1973To the Editor.— We read with interest the recent LETTER TO THE EDITOR by Chang (223:1510, 1973) suggesting that amoeba are capable of parasitizing pinworms. In recently completed studies at our hospital, we have found that the glycogen-laden integuments of schistosomes that were filtered from patients (Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, to be published) were ...
S W, Young, Z, Farid
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ParaSite: The Pick of Parasites on the Web
Parasitology Today, 1998While a steady flow of questions were put to the general parasitology newsgroup during November, none provoked discussion. Other discussion lists came to life:
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Host genes, parasites and parasitic infections
International Journal for Parasitology, 1993Resistance to infection of mammalian hosts by parasites is under genetic control at many different levels: between species, between races, breeds and lines of single species and between individuals. These genetic effects have been described in many host-parasite systems.
G D, Gray, H S, Gill
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Nature Genetics, 2003
The technical problem of detecting the retrotransposition—amplification and genomic dispersion of sequences through an RNA intermediate—of Pol III–directed transcripts has been solved. This provides a long-sought experimental system to learn how Alu repeats amplified to a high copy number in human DNA.
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The technical problem of detecting the retrotransposition—amplification and genomic dispersion of sequences through an RNA intermediate—of Pol III–directed transcripts has been solved. This provides a long-sought experimental system to learn how Alu repeats amplified to a high copy number in human DNA.
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Clinics in Gastroenterology, 1979
In summary, it appears that giardiasis, coccidiosis, cryptosporidiosis, strongyloidiasis, capillariasis and perhaps P. falciparum malaria are the only parasitic diseases which cause malabsorption of many nutrients. D. latum and A. lumbricoides interfere with vitamin B12 and vitamin A absorption, respectively.
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In summary, it appears that giardiasis, coccidiosis, cryptosporidiosis, strongyloidiasis, capillariasis and perhaps P. falciparum malaria are the only parasitic diseases which cause malabsorption of many nutrients. D. latum and A. lumbricoides interfere with vitamin B12 and vitamin A absorption, respectively.
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