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G. De Boeck

Researcher at University of Antwerp

Publications -  53
Citations -  2292

G. De Boeck is an academic researcher from University of Antwerp. The author has contributed to research in topics: Common carp & Carp. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 53 publications receiving 2106 citations. Previous affiliations of G. De Boeck include Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.

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Effect of antivascular endothelial growth factor treatment on the intratumoral uptake of CPT-11.

TL;DR: It is suggested that tumour vascular function and tumour uptake of anticancer drugs improve with VEGF-blocking therapy, and the relevance for further investigations is indicated.
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Phytate and phytase in fish nutrition

TL;DR: Effects of phytate on fish, dephytinisation processes, phytase and pathway forphytate degradation,phytase production systems, mode ofPhytase application, bioefficacy of phyllase, effects of Phytase on growth performance, nutrient utilization and aquatic environment pollution, and optimum dosage of phydase in fish diets are discussed.
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Tumour necrosis factor alpha increases melphalan concentration in tumour tissue after isolated limb perfusion.

TL;DR: A significant sixfold increase in melphalan tumour tissue concentration after ILP when TNF-α was added to the perfusate, which provides a straightforward explanation for the observed synergism betweenmelphalan and T NF-α in ILP.
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Effects of Sublethal Copper Exposure on Copper Accumulation, Food Consumption, Growth, Energy Stores, and Nucleic Acid Content in Common Carp

TL;DR: Substantial biochemical changes were observed at the two highest copper exposure concentrations, but the correlation between growth rate and RNA:DNA ratio was poor considering the substantial differences in growth rate, and the use of the RNA: DNA ratio as a sensitive biomarker is questioned.
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A comparison of swimming capacity and energy use in seven European freshwater fish species

TL;DR: Long-distance migrators show higher swimming capacities and can potentially clear obstacles easier than short distance migrators with lower swimming capacities, which can be used to make estimates of maximum passable water speeds in culverts.