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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Toxicity of sulfanilamide in vitamins A and E deficient rabbits

Kosuri, Narayana Rao January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas State University Libraries
2

Whey growth factor protection against chemotherapy drug-induced toxicity in vitro / Vicki Leanne Taylor.

Taylor, Vicki Leanne January 1998 (has links)
Errata pasted onto front end paper. / Bibliography: leaves 193-211. / xiv, 211 leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Describes the development and application of an in vitro model used to investigate the cytoprotective effects of a whey-derived growth factor extract in reducing epithelial cell death caused by chemotherapy agents. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Physiology, 1998
3

KINETICS AND REGULATION OF PHASE II XENOBIOTIC METABOLISM IN ISOLATED RAT HEPATOCYTES AND PERFUSED LIVER

Sundheimer, David William January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
4

A comparison of the effects of three goitrogenic compounds on goiter development in the newly hatched chick

Handa, Robert James January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
5

Phototoxic effects of Zn sulfophthalocyanine on lung cancer cells (A549) grown as a monolayer and three dimensional multicellular tumour spheroids

16 July 2015 (has links)
D.Tech. (Biomedical Technology) / Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is an alternative treatment modality for malignant tumours based on the photodamage to tumour cells through a photochemical reaction (Ahn et al., 2013). PDT utilizes a light sensitive photosensitizer (PS) that selectively localizes in tumour cells and is excited by light of a specific wavelength in the presence of molecular oxygen. The excited PS leads to the generation of singlet oxygen or other reactive oxygen species(ROS) which induces cytotoxic damage to cellular organelles and eventually cell death. Singlet oxygen has a very short life and its generation is controlled by the presence of the PS and the laser light (Senge and Radomski, 2013).The subcellular localization site of the PS plays a vital role in determining the effectiveness and the extent of cellular damage as well as the mechanism involved in cell death. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide in both males and females, with an estimated 1.4 million deaths each year (American Cancer Society, 2011). Therapeutic modalities used in the treatment of lung cancer such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy and immunotherapy have rarely yielded a good prognosis and effective treatment remains a challenging problem to date. An alternative treatment modality with minimal complications such as PDT needs to be explored. Most in vitro PDT experiments are conducted on monolayer cultures and the cellular environment of these cultures does not correspond to that of in vivo studies. Multicellular tumour spheroids (MCTSs) serves as an important model in cancer research for the evaluation of therapeutic interventions since they mimic different aspects of the human tumour tissue environment.
6

THE EFFECTS OF GLUTATHIONE DEPLETION BY L-BUTHIONINE-(S,R) SULFOXIMINE ON THE ANTITUMOR EFFICACY OF MODEL SULFHYDRYL-DEPENDENT ANTICANCER AGENTS (BSO)

Soble, Michelle Joy, 1961- January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
7

Mind the developmental gap: Identifying adverse drug effects across childhood to evaluate biological mechanisms from growth and development

Giangreco, Nicholas Paul January 2022 (has links)
Adverse drug reactions are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality that costs billions of dollars for the healthcare system. In children, there is increased risk for adverse drug reactions with potentially lasting adverse effects into adulthood. The current pediatric drug safety landscape, including clinical trials, is limited as it rarely includes children and relies on extrapolation from adults. Children are not small adults but go through an evolutionarily conserved and physiologically dynamic process of growth and maturation. We hypothesize that adverse drug reactions manifest from the interaction between drug exposure and dynamic biological processes during child growth and development. While pediatric pharmacologists have studied and recognized this interaction, the evidence from these studies have focused on a few, well-known drug toxicities largely within animal models that have limited translation to children and their clinical care. Moreover, preclinical studies during drug development do not consider growth and maturation of children, which severely limits our knowledge of drug safety in this population. Post-marketing pediatric drug safety studies, on the other hand, leverage large amounts of observations to identify and characterize adverse drug events in the pediatric population after drugs enter the market. However, these observational studies have been limited to event surveillance and have not focused on evaluating why adverse drug events may manifest in children. We hypothesize that by developing statistical methodologies with prior knowledge of dynamic, shared information during development, we can improve the detection of adverse drug events in children. We further hypothesize that detecting adverse drug events in this way also improves the evaluation of dynamic biological and physiological processes during child growth and development. In chapter 1, we described the pediatric drug safety landscape, dynamic processes from pediatric developmental biology, and motivation for a large-scale and data-driven approach to study the interaction between drug treatment and child development. In chapter 2, using drug event reports collected by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), we evaluated statistical models for identifying temporal trends of adverse effects across childhood. We found the generalized additive model (GAM), as compared to a popular disproportionality method, show improved detection performance especially of rare pediatric adverse drug events. In chapter 3, we applied covariate-adjusted drug-event GAMs in a systematic way to develop a resource of nearly half a million adverse drug event (ADE) risk estimates across child development stages. We showed that not only do significant ADEs through childhood recapitulate dynamic organ and system maturation, but we also provide granular, development-specific risk for known pediatric drug effects that were previously unknown. Importantly, this approach facilitated the evaluation of dynamic biological processes, such as drug-metabolizer gene expression levels across childhood, that we observed coincided with dynamic risk of adverse drug effects. In chapter 4, we performed several case studies showing population-level evidence for well-known pediatric adverse drug reactions using our generated resource. In addition, we developed an accessible web portal, the Pediatric Drug Safety portal (PDSportal), to retrieve from our resource the population-level evidence of user-specified adverse drug events in the pediatric population across child development stages. In conclusion, we summarize three key research directions in data-driven pediatric drug safety research: quantifying child vs. adult drug safety profiles, predicting pre-clinical drug toxicity across childhood, and detecting genetic susceptibility of pediatric adverse drug events. Our results demonstrate that developing pediatric drug safety methods directly for children using data-driven approaches improves both identification and evaluation of adverse drug events during the period of child growth and development.
8

Acute and chronic toxicity of the flavonoid-containing plant, Artemisia afra in rodents.

Mukinda, James Tshikosa January 2005 (has links)
The aim of this study was to investigate the possible toxicity of the flavonoid-containing plant, Artemisia afra and especially establish the safety of the aqueous extract of this plant after acute and chronic administration to mice and rats respectively.
9

Acute and chronic toxicity of the flavonoid-containing plant, Artemisia afra in rodents.

Mukinda, James Tshikosa January 2005 (has links)
The aim of this study was to investigate the possible toxicity of the flavonoid-containing plant, Artemisia afra and especially establish the safety of the aqueous extract of this plant after acute and chronic administration to mice and rats respectively.
10

2006-2011年我國中藥與西藥不良反應頻度和强度的回顧性比較研究 / Comparative study of frequency and intensity of adverse drug reactions between traditional Chinese medicine and western medicine : a systematic review, 2006-2011 in China

阮貞 January 2012 (has links)
University of Macau / Institute of Chinese Medical Sciences

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