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1 and left many people mentally and physically traumatized.
2 ntrafollicular regions when the epidermis is traumatized.
3 timony method of psychotherapy in a group of traumatized adult refugees from genocide in Bosnia-Herze
4 of white matter tracts in a sample of highly traumatized African-American women with (n=25) and witho
5 gency department may be faced with soiled or traumatized airways.
6 in matched groups of 28 PTSD patients and 27 traumatized and 32 nontraumatized healthy control subjec
7 left anterior descending coronary artery was traumatized and a high-grade stenosis created.
8         These profiles also differed between traumatized and nontraumatized regions of the arterial w
9 circulatory dysfunction and tissue injury in traumatized animals during endotoxemia.
10 ss effective in the initial infection of the traumatized aortic valve.
11  compensatory enhancement of activity in non-traumatized areas of the brain following a focal lesion.
12 to arise from the device in an area that was traumatized at the time of deployment.
13                                              Traumatized axons possess an extremely limited ability t
14  of the complement system is detected in the traumatized brain early after TBI; however, its role in
15 t known how cytosolic proteins released from traumatized brain tissue reach the peripheral blood.
16 data suggest that increased (64)Cu uptake in traumatized brain tissues holds potential as a new bioma
17 tion represent physiologic challenges to the traumatized brain.
18 tical impact in mice, MMP-9 was increased in traumatized brain.
19 ate prolonged glial induction of HO-1 in the traumatized brain.
20 nce of plaque-like deposits of A beta in the traumatized brain.
21 erapeutic benefits in the brains of patients traumatized by cardiac arrest or stroke.
22                                      In skin traumatized by the tape-stripping method (n = 12), a mar
23 escribe the range of outcomes experienced by traumatized children.
24 st, it updates readers on new treatments for traumatized children.
25 (N = 81) was recruited from an urban, highly traumatized civilian population at Grady Memorial Hospit
26            Gene expression analysis of noise-traumatized cochleae revealed time-dependent transcripti
27  stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in a highly traumatized cohort of women but not men.
28 tion; in addition, these studies have lacked traumatized comparison groups without PTSD.
29   Posttraumatic stress disorder patients and traumatized control subjects exhibited 59% and 51% lower
30 g extinction in the PTSD group compared with traumatized control women [F(1,38) = 5.04, p < .05].
31 ren with PTSD and 24 age- and gender-matched traumatized controls without PTSD, who all experienced t
32 dings indicated that, relative to comparably traumatized controls, decreased integrity (measured by f
33 glycoproteins upregulated on the surfaces of traumatized corneal epithelial cells.
34                   Furthermore, uptake in the traumatized cortex of untreated TBI mice (1.15 +/- 0.53
35 ke from blood was enhanced in and around the traumatized cortex.
36  emotions, and thoughts originating from the traumatizing experience.
37 d blood-aqueous barrier of these complicated traumatized eyes co-act to trigger secondary IOL calcifi
38 can adversely affect the outcome in severely traumatized eyes with NLP.
39 e the outcome of surgical repair of severely traumatized eyes with no light perception vision as preo
40 d with use of intraocular gas in complicated traumatized eyes, and had central areas of IOL opacifica
41 urgery may restore useful vision in severely traumatized eyes.
42 ary enucleation or evisceration for severely traumatized eyes.
43 in the FKBP5 SNP rs1360780 in a sample of 82 traumatized female civilians.
44                            The most severely traumatized group (POWs held by the Japanese) had PTSD l
45  rates of the psychiatric disorders found in traumatized groups; they closely resemble patients with
46  concern that naloxone administration in the traumatized host may have deleterious effects because it
47 ted with fear-related phenotypes in a highly traumatized human cohort.
48 e functional connectivity of the amygdala in traumatized humans.
49                                 Treatment of traumatized IF-CCKR-2 tg mice with fluoxetine, a selecti
50                           Moreover, in these traumatized IF-CCKR-2 tg mice, both the glucocorticoid n
51               They often occur together, but traumatized individuals may suffer from various combinat
52 vioral therapeutic interventions in recently traumatized individuals who are at risk for developing t
53 mice and two cohorts of 167 and 244 severely traumatized (Injury Severity Score > 15) adult (> 18 yr)
54                 Injection of sperm RNAs from traumatized males into fertilized wild-type oocytes repr
55             When the cornea was mechanically traumatized, message for all six chemokines was transien
56 -two percent of the 59 children who had been traumatized met full criteria for PTSD, 32% had some sym
57        Recent data indicate that survival of traumatized neurons is strain dependent and influenced b
58                                              Traumatized neurons with higher [Cl(-)](i) demonstrated
59 utyrate-mediated depolarization occurring in traumatized neurons; and improved recovery of neuronal c
60  may face a variety of challenges, including traumatized or soiled airways, patients with cervical sp
61 ived genomic data obtained from 167 severely traumatized patients over 28 days were assessed for diff
62                           Seventeen severely traumatized patients were prospectively followed up in t
63  identify the later development of sepsis in traumatized patients.
64 sk factors for acute lung injury in severely traumatized patients.
65  highly accurate and low cost cornerstone in traumatized patients.
66 st few years due in part to the finding that traumatized persons are unable to use safety cues to inh
67 s from patient and military groups that many traumatized persons suffer from a subsyndromal form of P
68 nificantly more occupationally impaired than traumatized persons without PTSD.
69               PTSD symptoms were compared in traumatized pregnant women and a sample of nonpregnant t
70 on of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in glia in the traumatized rat brain.
71 poptotic neurons with high frequency in both traumatized rat cortex and hippocampus.
72 were significantly increased in the blood of traumatized rats and were reduced after systemic adminis
73      Systemic administration of rsPSGL.Ig to traumatized rats prolonged survival time and survival ra
74 guish the findings that occur in the acutely traumatized shoulder from those that typify the chronic
75                                              Traumatized skin also had crusting and suprabasilar acan
76 halation, or contamination of conjunctiva or traumatized skin by infected animal products.
77 tion, or contamination of the conjunctiva or traumatized skin by infected animal products.
78 analysis showing brain structure deficits in traumatized subjects with PTSD compared with trauma-expo
79                     Here we find, in heavily traumatized subjects, a sex-specific association of PACA
80 c memory and to the risk for PTSD in heavily traumatized survivors of the Rwandan genocide.
81 nd older age groups showed larger numbers of traumatized teeth.
82 ation and crushing injuries of the chest may traumatize the thoracic aorta or its branches.
83 produces slower rotational-rebound evulsion, traumatizing the globe and breaching the nerve posterior
84 tion of viable tissue elsewhere in the heart traumatizing the ischemic area, plus the changes in high
85                          Although not highly traumatized, the subjects with depersonalization disorde
86              Excessive release of ATP by the traumatized tissue, followed by activation of high-affin
87 s that are more patient 'sensitive' and less traumatizing to the lungs.
88  The DSM-IV field trial for PTSD studied 395 traumatized treatment-seeking subjects and 125 non-treat
89 ms of PTSD in five groups (N=29) of multiply traumatized women diagnosed with chronic PTSD.
90 d pregnant women and a sample of nonpregnant traumatized women from the National Comorbidity Survey.
91 ability to ELA, as seen in this group of non-traumatized young adults.
92 tion-free youth with PTSD and 27 healthy non-traumatized youth of comparable age, sex, and IQ.

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