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1 MSCs were infused intraportally into CCl(4) -injured mice with and without neutralizing antibodies.
2               Alveolar macrophages from acid-injured Akt2(-/-) mice demonstrated the alternative acti
3 plasma and the bronchoalveolar fluid of acid-injured mice (Spearman's rho = -0.73 and -0.69, respecti
4 ificant differences in T2 values between ACL-injured and control knees were found.
5 ompartments at baseline and follow-up in ACL-injured knees and were compared with measures acquired i
6 bearing medial femorotibial cartilage in ACL-injured knees were significantly elevated at 1-year foll
7 f the posterolateral tibial cartilage in ACL-injured knees were significantly elevated at baseline co
8 sprouting, whereas puromycin aminonucleoside-injured podocyte supernatant decreased these GEN respons
9  neointimal formation in balloon angioplasty-injured rat carotid arteries (0.172 +/- 29.9, versus 0.3
10                                 The antibody-injured pericytes had reduced efficacy in inhibiting T c
11 PCs from APAP+ISO-treated mice to other APAP-injured mice improved AILI, an effect antagonized by DKK
12 proportionately sampled group of non-assault-injured youth enrolled from September 2009 through Decem
13 or violent reinjury among high-risk, assault-injured youth is poorly understood.
14 o attenuate intimal hyperplasia in a balloon-injured artery was determined.
15 P, in rat embryonic aortas and adult balloon-injured carotid arteries compared with quiescent adult a
16 reover, a PCL sheath deployed around balloon-injured rat carotid arteries was associated with a minim
17   Finally, restoration of miR-145 in balloon-injured arteries via Ad-miR-145 inhibits neointimal grow
18 MC growth and intimal hyperplasia in balloon-injured carotid arteries of streptozotocin-treated rats,
19 s inhibited by warfarin treatment in balloon-injured carotids.
20                                   In balloon-injured rabbit arteries, cell proliferation (51%) and le
21 n cultured rat VSMCs in vitro and in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries in vivo, we demonstrate tha
22 f Id3a inhibited lesion formation in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries in vivo.
23 apoptosis of VSMCs in culture and in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries, thus contributing to Mfn-2
24 PGC-1beta expression was observed in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries.
25 lammation and neointima formation in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries.
26 of rno-miR-31 is verified in vivo in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries.
27 ts were further confirmed in vivo in balloon-injured rat carotid arteries.
28 ifferentially expressed sequences in balloon-injured versus normal arteries.
29 expression levels are upregulated in balloon-injured vs. uninjured VSMCs.
30                                   In balloon-injured, atherosclerosis-free porcine arteries, COX-1 ge
31 erized in vitro and then seeded into balloon-injured rat carotid arteries to determine the effects on
32 ession increases in the neointima of balloon-injured rat carotids.
33 owth factor (VEGF) expression in the balloon-injured carotid artery of female Zucker fatty rats.
34 cible TN-C protein expression in the balloon-injured rat artery wall.
35  Indeed, delivery of Ad-p27-126TS to balloon-injured arteries in rats not only induced faster and mor
36      Local NO-ELIP administration to balloon-injured carotid arteries attenuated the development of i
37 ks after perivascular application to balloon-injured rat common carotid arteries, halofuginone versus
38 ecular mechanism of PESDA binding to balloon-injured vasculature.
39 teration developed in saline-treated balloon-injured rat aortas (20.3+/-8.0%), and psiepsilonRACK sig
40 time that neointimal formation using balloon-injured rat carotid arteries was associated with a signi
41 sphorylation were observed in 1-week balloon-injured arteries compared with uninjured arteries, and t
42 of ERK activation in stellate cells from BDL-injured liver led to a decrease in expression of endothe
43    Conditional ablation of MSLN+ aPFs in BDL-injured mice attenuated liver fibrosis by approximately
44 maximum pupil constriction diameter in blast-injured mice using red light or blue light stimuli 24 ho
45 rformed in a homogeneous population of blast-injured polytrauma inpatients.
46                                Further, BLEO-injured il17a(-/-) mice had diminished levels of circula
47 of CLF-1/CLC to both uninjured and bleomycin-injured mice led to the pulmonary accumulation of CD4(+)
48 ivity in fibroblasts isolated from bleomycin-injured lung with induced telomerase activity.
49       CCL2 expression increased in bleomycin-injured bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), but significantly
50 and Smad3 levels were increased in bleomycin-injured lungs.
51 PC species that increase in BAL of bleomycin-injured mice were discordant, inconsistent with a substr
52 fibroblasts isolated from lungs of bleomycin-injured mice, effects that are inhibited in bleomycin-AG
53 increases markedly in the lungs of bleomycin-injured mice.
54 RNA patterns were seen in lungs of bleomycin-injured wild-type, but not CD103(-/-) or Mmp7(-/-), mice
55  other day for 1 week in normal or bleomycin-injured mice maintains significantly higher lung sphingo
56 or vitronectin-binding activity to bleomycin-injured mice genetically deficient in PAI-1.
57 and C5aR in lung fibrosis by using bleomycin-injured mice with fibrotic lungs, elevated local C3a and
58                                        Brain-injured animals had significantly increased caspase-medi
59                                        Brain-injured patients experienced a maturation defect of the
60                                        Brain-injured patients ventilated more than 24 hours were eval
61                        (iv) Finally, a brain-injured adult with glutaric aciduria type 1 had regional
62 ence for the conscious experience of a brain-injured patient, who had remained entirely behaviorally
63 t are extremely challenging in acutely brain-injured patients.
64 tely isolated living slices from adult brain-injured mice.
65                                    All brain-injured mice that consumed BCAAs demonstrated cognitive
66 ury status of the host brain, although brain-injured animals had significantly fewer graft cells than
67 l death was observed in both sham- and brain-injured animals, and caspase-mediated graft cell death w
68 150 healthy controls and communicative brain-injured subjects in various states of conscious wakefuln
69       Transfer of blood-borne EVs from brain-injured animals was also enough to suppress exploratory
70 eripheral blood mononuclear cells from brain-injured patients with nosocomial pneumonia generated sig
71  SAS, and GCS scores in critically ill brain-injured patients, with and without sedation.
72 her serum levels of GFAP and UCH-L1 in brain-injured children compared with controls and also demonst
73 EL(+) pyramidal and granule neurons in brain-injured mice were amplified and compared with those from
74 nulomas was significantly decreased in brain-injured patients with nosocomial pneumonia (3% [range: 1
75 range: 8%-61%]) and was not altered in brain-injured patients with nosocomial pneumonia (31% [range:
76 l pneumonia (1% [range: 0%-7%]) and in brain-injured patients with nosocomial pneumonia (4% [range: 2
77 ultinucleated giant cells was lower in brain-injured patients without nosocomial pneumonia (1% [range
78 ) and was not significantly altered in brain-injured patients without nosocomial pneumonia (26% [rang
79  cells were significantly increased in brain-injured patients without nosocomial pneumonia (66% [rang
80 verall immune response to pathogens in brain-injured patients, and assessed its relationship to nosoc
81 e functions that are often impaired in brain-injured patients.
82  can offer prolonged WM improvement in brain-injured patients.
83 ssessment of level of consciousness in brain-injured patients.
84 tural killer cells were not altered in brain-injured patients.
85 arotoxin increased BBB permeability in brain-injured rats, while PNU-282987 injection decreased such
86 unction assayed using these methods in brain-injured subjects.
87 the extent of functional activation of brain-injured circuits is a consequence of initial disruption
88 science and the neurointensive care of brain-injured human patients.
89       As PIE affects as many as 20% of brain-injured patients, reliable biomarkers are imperative bef
90 tone in the management of the severely brain-injured patient and should be used to compliment other t
91 oxyglucose PETs obtained from severely brain-injured patients (BIs) and 10 normal volunteers (NVs).
92              We studied seven severely brain-injured patients and a control group of 14 subjects usin
93 ommunication capacity in some severely brain-injured patients who may not retain sufficient motor fun
94 in a continuous sample of 143 severely brain-injured patients with DOC (and 96 volunteers), across 2
95 gnized cognitive abilities in severely brain-injured patients with very limited or no motor responses
96 7 were administered to splenectomized, brain-injured rats.
97                      Specifically, the brain-injured subjects dissociated bedside and functional magn
98 ndent responses without exception, the brain-injured subjects showed a wide variation in the correlat
99 of exogenous IL-1beta and TNF-alpha to brain-injured animals worsened Evans Blue dye extravasation, s
100                Almost 50% of traumatic brain-injured (TBI) patients are alcohol intoxicated.
101 thy subjects is preserved in traumatic brain-injured patients.
102  degenerating neurons in the traumatic brain-injured tissue with the absence of staining in our sham-
103 sity of care provided to traumatically brain-injured adults and to determine the influence of intensi
104 atient outcomes in older traumatically brain-injured patients.
105 rbidity and mortality in traumatically brain-injured patients.
106 e infancy and early childhood, whereas brain-injured children had an early velocity peak (18 months)
107 onia (3% [range: 1%-9%]) compared with brain-injured patients without nosocomial pneumonia (16% [rang
108  fewer mature granulomas compared with brain-injured patients without nosocomial pneumonia and with h
109                                         Burn-injured Sprague Dawley rats were randomized into treatme
110                        In Experiment 1, burn-injured young rats received once daily saline or morphin
111 e collected for a 10-year period on all burn-injured patients admitted to the Birmingham Burn Centre
112  CFU of E. coli, whereas the LD(50) for burn-injured mice was 50 x 10(3) CFU at 7 days postinjury.
113          In contrast, spleen cells from burn-injured CD4(-/-) mice produced cytokines at significantl
114 ndicated that splenocytes prepared from burn-injured CD8(-/-) mice displayed TLR-induced cytokine pro
115                   Lymph node cells from burn-injured mice also produced higher levels of Th2-type cyt
116 Moreover, the peritoneal neutrophils in burn-injured mice were more highly activated than neutrophils
117  common sites of secondary infection in burn-injured patients.
118 istry; Western blot) was upregulated in burn-injured young rats receiving morphine alone or in combin
119 ve found that prophylactic treatment of burn-injured mice with the DC growth factor FLT3 ligand (FL)
120         Data obtained from the urine of burn-injured rats and pediatric burn patients match previousl
121               We have demonstrated that burn-injured adults remain hyperglycemic, are insulin resista
122                           We found that burn-injured mice had higher numbers of circulating neutrophi
123 ructured, multidisciplinary approach to burn-injured patients, early surgical excision and wound clos
124 phrenic motor recovery was present in all C2-injured rats via crossed spinal synaptic pathways that c
125 rrow cells to skeletal muscle in cardiotoxin-injured anterior tibialis muscle in a green fluorescent
126 ssion and muscle regeneration in cardiotoxin-injured beta3-integrin-null mice are impaired, as indica
127  that gene transfer of GEFT into cardiotoxin-injured mouse tibialis anterior muscle exerts a powerful
128 e regeneration when grafted into cardiotoxin-injured muscle.
129  regeneration when injected into cardiotoxin-injured skeletal muscle.
130 on of these committed cells into cardiotoxin-injured skeletal muscles of NOD/SCID mice reveals surviv
131 ells isolated from dystrophic or cardiotoxin-injured muscle fail to undergo myogenesis.
132 rgeted mice, we show that in ferric chloride-injured veins platelet adhesion to subendothelium is dec
133     Hepatocytes that reside in a chronically-injured liver have altered growth responses compared to
134                                   In E. coli-injured human lungs, mesenchymal stem cells restored alv
135 nd samples from extremity injuries in combat-injured U.S. service members.
136 orresponding mRNAs in the IgG immune complex-injured lung, compared with wild-type mice.
137 chia coli UTI was modeled in the spinal cord-injured (SCI) rat with the hypothesis that SCI animals w
138   In this study, we show that in spinal cord-injured C57BL/6 mice, both ApoE S1 and ApoE S3 transcrip
139 athing cells) in a population of spinal cord-injured companion dogs that accurately model many of the
140 duction in F4/80+ macrophages in spinal cord-injured MMP-9 knock-out mice (by 36%) or wild-type mice,
141 s after long-term engraftment in spinal cord-injured NOD-scid mice.
142  a significant improvement for a spinal cord-injured patient.
143                                  Spinal cord-injured rats had fewer myelinated axons in the medullary
144 -reflex can modify locomotion in spinal cord-injured rats.
145 ing a model for VAP prediction in critically-injured trauma patients, and to identify differentially
146 veloped that accurately predicted critically-injured trauma patients that went on to develop VAP (VAP
147 ate or NMDA was injected directly into crush-injured rat sciatic nerves, ERK1/2 phosphorylation was o
148 olated them as GFP(+)EpCAM(-) cells from DDC-injured livers of Sox9-EGFP mice.
149 x9(+) cells surrounded luminal spaces in DDC-injured liver while they expressed HNF4alpha.
150 d compensatory proliferation observed in DEN-injured ERRalpha-null livers is concomitant with increas
151 cle cells was readily observed in denudation-injured carotid arteries at 7 and 14 days.
152 ing of diffuse-injured circuits into diffuse-injured tissue likely establishes maladaptive circuits r
153                     The sprouting of diffuse-injured circuits into diffuse-injured tissue likely esta
154 se an inflammatory response in intact or DSS-injured mouse colon.
155 d recruitment of neutrophils to the elastase-injured aortic wall and impaired local production of CXC
156 oupled receptor 6(GPR6) expression in fAbeta-injured neurons.
157 verexpressing animals compared with non-FasL-injured littermates.
158 avital microscopy to ferric chloride (FeCl3)-injured mesenteric arterioles and laser-induced injury o
159                              Control and FPI-injured rats at 1 year of age displayed large-amplitude
160          Here we demonstrate that, in freeze-injured muscle, CCR2 co-localized with Mac-3, a marker o
161  were also observed in an in vivo gentamicin-injured animal model.
162 ediated overexpression of NoxA1 in guidewire-injured mouse carotid arteries significantly increased s
163 sabled (n = 12) and vegetative (n = 10) head-injured patients who survived between 6 h and 3 years, a
164 ted into the rehabilitation program for head-injured military personnel who will be returned to duty,
165  new data reveal safety and efficacy in head-injured patients.
166 magnesium favourably affects outcome in head-injured patients.
167 input resistance in controls but not in head-injured rats.
168 cal penetrating head injuries and a non-head-injured control group for the Val66Met BDNF polymorphism
169 ower rates of pneumonia compared to non-head-injured trauma patients and suggest that the mechanism o
170      This study examines the profile of head-injured (HI) trauma patients and their actual need for t
171 e months following the trauma, 21.2% of head-injured and 16.3% of nonhead-injured patients fulfilled
172                           CT imaging of head-injured children has risks of radiation-induced malignan
173 ed the DSM-IV diagnosis of PCS; 8.8% of head-injured patients fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for P
174 lei in severely disabled and vegetative head-injured patients.
175 o be an active process in which viable, heat-injured cells induce a signal cascade and/or mediator th
176 hils infiltrate the intracerebral hemorrhage-injured brain.
177 on and axonal excitability in chronically HX-injured rats, (2) that antibody treatment increased the
178 d improvement of synaptic transmission in HX-injured spinal cord.
179                                     Ischemia-injured porcine ileal mucosa was mounted in Ussing chamb
180 ing recovery of barrier function in ischemia-injured intestine through a mechanism involving stimulat
181 inal Cl - secretion restores TER in ischemia-injured intestine.
182 the recovery of barrier function in ischemia-injured porcine ileum.
183 hat vascular survival and growth in ischemia-injured tissue may be stimulated by suppressing PHD2 in
184 rtery ligation and reperfusion, the ischemia-injured heart elaborates the cardioprotective polypeptid
185             Application of PGE 2 to ischemia-injured ileal mucosa stimulated increases in Isc, an ind
186 from airspaces of fluorescein isothiocyanate-injured CCR2(+/+) mice than from CCR2(-/-) mice.
187 ring stem cells (SASCs) from both laceration-injured and control noninjured skeletal muscles in mice
188                                        Laser-injured frog eyes were employed to test the potential of
189 ctivity was present in both normal and laser-injured mice at the laser burn site and at the ganglion
190 latelet-mediated thrombus formation in laser-injured arterioles by > 75% (P < 0.001).
191  map localized photoreceptor lesion in laser-injured frog eyes.
192     In vivo microthrombus formation in laser-injured vessels significantly increased in fibrinogen-tr
193                         IOS imaging of laser-injured frog eyes indicated that the confocal IOS could
194  permeability compared with retinas of laser-injured mouse retinas injected with control plasmid.
195                  Four days postinjury, laser-injured mouse retinas injected with IGFBP-3NB plasmid de
196 were anesthetized, ventilated, saline lavage-injured, and randomized into groups: group 1 (convention
197 rectly with a parenchymal probe in the least-injured hemisphere.
198                                 The ligament-injured joint is at high risk for osteoarthritis.
199  initiator of osteoarthritis in the ligament-injured patient.
200                                 The ligation-injured lacrimal glands temporarily decreased in weight
201 urotrophic factor (GDNF) stimulation of long-injured axons.
202            For successful regeneration, long-injured axons must overcome their poor intrinsic growth
203 2 in bronchial alveolar lavage fluids in LPS-injured lung compared with wild-type mice.
204  reduced inflammation and lung injury in LPS-injured mice.
205 ophils in both the blood and airspace of LPS-injured mice and that Ab-mediated SDF-1 blockade signifi
206 -derived EVs before adoptive transfer to LPS-injured mice.
207 cally lower in Lum-/- - compared with Lum+/+-injured cornea.
208                                      Lum-/- -injured corneas showed significantly lower caspase-3/7 a
209 ees from its phase three location and mildly-injured animals were impaired.
210  One day after phase three, sham- and mildly-injured animals were tested on a phase four conflict act
211                           Control and mildly-injured rats learned this task within four ten-minute tr
212                                   Moderately-injured animals were also impaired if tested 3 weeks aft
213 thin four ten-minute trials while moderately-injured animals were impaired.
214 ilat on macrophage-conditioned medium (MPCM)-injured human mesangial cells can be modulated by this r
215 ition of receptor-associated protein to MPCM-injured mesangial cells with and without ACE-I increased
216 analysis of the steady-state and naphthalene-injured trachea to evaluate the predictions of this mode
217  of lineage relationships in the naphthalene-injured tracheal epithelium demonstrated that two multip
218 n of hundreds of genes across sham and nerve-injured groups, which can be difficult to validate, part
219 e in both lamina I and II neurons from nerve-injured animals than in controls, suggesting that endoge
220 excitability, and against neurons from nerve-injured rats.
221          On- and off-cells recorded in nerve-injured animals exhibited novel responses to innocuous m
222 gen alleviated mechanical allodynia in nerve-injured animals.
223 induced NMDA receptor-dependent LTP in nerve-injured rats.
224 sitivity in a dose-dependent manner in nerve-injured rats.
225 na I of the spinal cord dorsal horn in nerve-injured versus control animals, suggesting a functional
226 ges in primary afferents from naive or nerve-injured rats, respectively, thus confirming the predicte
227 and exhibited enhanced migration toward NMDA-injured hippocampal cultures.
228                   We studied injured and non-injured Amish glutaric aciduria type 1 patients using ma
229 cifically collect individual injured and non-injured nociceptive DRG neurons and to define their gene
230 ely express this transcription factor in non-injured adult DRG neurons.
231 a(V) were not significantly different in non-injured and SNL-injured DRG neurons.
232 ed with atherosclerotic plaque growth in non-injured arteries.
233 owing experimental pressure responses in non-injured human subjects or to data from people with SCI.
234  postinjury but was still higher than in non-injured mice.
235                                       In non-injured muscle, muscle-specific kinase expression was si
236 found minimal transcriptional changes in non-injured neurons at 7 days after SNI.
237                                       In non-injured patients, middle cerebral artery velocities were
238  mg/kg, intraperitoneal) lowered cAMP in non-injured rats to injury amounts, which were unchanged by
239 while producing no significant change in non-injured rats.
240 the injured hemisphere compared with the non-injured hemisphere, while the hyperpolarized bicarbonate
241 lly evoked activity that extended to the non-injured hemisphere; by 8 weeks, significant recovery was
242 others like GAP-43, was increased in the non-injured neurons.
243 in abnormal neuronal hypoactivity in the non-injured primary somatosensory cortex (S1).
244 llular markers of neuroplasticity in the non-injured S1 compared to TBI rats that did not receive the
245                  (i) Three children (two non-injured) had low cerebral blood flow, prolonged mean tra
246 ponse to pressure in people with SCI vs. non-injured control subjects, and thus may serve as novel di
247  of hedgehog activation, consistent with non-injured controls.
248 , 21.2% of head-injured and 16.3% of nonhead-injured patients fulfilled the DSM-IV diagnosis of PCS;
249 egion of the unilateral ureteral obstruction-injured kidney in mice correlating with SMAD3 and p53(Se
250 these results indicate that while LFP in P19-injured animals does not lead to significant cell death,
251 ated that regardless of injury severity, P19-injured rats exhibited a significant increase in escape
252 er eight strains tested, especially when pre-injured.
253 obal gene expression changes in the pressure-injured ONH.
254 active caspase-3 protein was enhanced in I/R-injured and CsA-treated kidneys, but decreased by Tac, R
255 that miR-494 was downregulated in murine I/R-injured and human infarcted hearts.
256 tion of full-length caspase-3 widened in I/R-injured kidneys from normal distal tubules and collectin
257 ficantly increased in uninephrectomy and I/R-injured kidneys, they were not significantly affected by
258 nitrosylated mitochondrial proteins from I/R-injured mouse livers with or without MnTMPyP pretreatmen
259      Tumor was differentiated from radiation-injured tissue by histopathology (n = 13) or 1-y clinica
260 the vitreous of retinal ischemia-reperfusion-injured adult nonobese diabetic-severe combined immunode
261  metastases residing in ischemia-reperfusion-injured liver lobes acquired CSC characteristics.
262                                      Scratch-injured mouse eyes were infected with the six P. aerugin
263 p inhibited neuronal inflammation in scratch-injured neurons.
264 ged 3 weeks later by inoculating the scratch-injured cornea with P. aeruginosa.
265 f acute lung injury on mortality in severely-injured trauma patients beyond baseline severity of illn
266 ements, the animals were allocated to a sham-injured group (n = 5), an injured and saline-treated gro
267 ed hemorrhagic hypotension (n = 8), and sham-injured control animals receiving anesthesia and surgery
268 s, the animals were allocated to either sham-injured, nontreated controls (sham), injured, nontreated
269 ion, we show herein that the LD(50) for sham-injured mice was 10(3) CFU of E. coli, whereas the LD(50
270 vents (EEEs) that are never observed in sham-injured animals and have electrographic appearance simil
271 sue with the absence of staining in our sham-injured brains.
272 ad significantly fewer graft cells than sham-injured animals.
273 e-mediated graft cell death compared to sham-injured animals.
274 eral cortex and hippocampus compared to sham-injured controls 24h after mTBI.
275 cal tissue loss (p < .01) compared with sham-injured animals.
276 rall survival of TBI mice compared with sham-injured mice.
277          Neuronal cells dissociated from SNE-injured and contralateral L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia
278 gnificantly different in non-injured and SNL-injured DRG neurons.
279 imulated with conditioned medium from spinal-injured tissue explants.
280 tent effects on restoring function to spinal-injured adult mammals.
281 todomain [aa 27-310; NgR(310)ecto] to spinal-injured rats.
282 ized the SSc epidermis and asked whether SSc-injured epidermal cells release factors capable of promo
283 t reactive glial cells in the cortex of stab-injured or Alzheimer's disease (AD) model mice can be di
284 s should guide future experiments on stretch-injured axons.
285                              Rapidly stretch-injured rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells express cellul
286 nections after transplantation in the stroke-injured brain.
287 to promote detrimental actions in the stroke-injured brain.
288 y revealed that monocytes home to the stroke-injured hemisphere., and that infiltration peaks 3 d aft
289 ized with adherent bacteria in superficially-injured corneas.
290 surface only if the cornea was superficially-injured.
291 lls in normal liver, in carbon tetrachloride-injured liver, and in several models of OC activation.
292 chanisms underlying TAI in the traumatically-injured immature brain.
293 nd SMA in both injured (ipsilesional) and un-injured (contralesional) hemispheres.
294 st endothelial cells in vein grafts and wire-injured arteries.
295 ia were evaluated in cultured VSMCs and wire-injured mouse carotid arteries from wild-type (WT, C57BL
296 rmed at 2 and 4 wk after injury in both wire-injured ApoE(-/-) and wild-type C57BL/6 mice.
297 io was significantly greater in femoral wire-injured arteries from P2Y(12)(+/+) compared with P2Y(12)
298 elets inhibited endothelial recovery in wire-injured carotid arteries, but this effect was also abrog
299 nd vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 in wire-injured carotid arteries.
300 r antiglaucoma drugs were determined on zinc-injured retinal cells.

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