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Mohamed T. Abdel Aziz

Researcher at Cairo University

Publications -  23
Citations -  563

Mohamed T. Abdel Aziz is an academic researcher from Cairo University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mesenchymal stem cell & Curcumin. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 23 publications receiving 522 citations.

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Efficacy of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Suppression of Hepatocarcinorigenesis in Rats: Possible Role of Wnt Signaling

TL;DR: Administration of MSCs in chemically induced HCC has tumor suppressive effects as evidenced by down regulation of Wnt signaling target genes concerned with antiapoptosis, mitogenesis, cell proliferation and cell cycle regulation, with subsequent amelioration of liver histopathological picture and liver function.
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The role of bone marrow derived-mesenchymal stem cells in attenuation of kidney function in rats with diabetic nephropathy.

TL;DR: MSC therapy significantly improved 24 h urinary albumin, serum urea and creatinine concentrations, increased angiogenic growth factor VEGF, and anti-apoptotic protein bcl2 while decreased the pro-inflammatory TNF-α, fibrogenic growth factor TGF β, and pro-apopotic protein Bax.
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Effect of novel water soluble curcumin derivative on experimental type- 1 diabetes mellitus (short term study)

TL;DR: The novel water soluble curcumin derivative by its small dose possesses antidiabetic actions and that heme oxygenase induction seems to play an important role in its anti-diabetic effects.
Journal Article

Effect of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells on cardiovascular complications in diabetic rats

TL;DR: Rat bone marrow harbors cells that have the capacity to differentiate into functional insulin-producing cells capable of controlling blood glucose level in diabetic rats that may provide a source of cell-based therapy for DM.
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Signaling mechanisms of a water soluble curcumin derivative in experimental type 1 diabetes with cardiomyopathy.

TL;DR: NCD andCurcumin prevented diabetes-induced upregulation of these parameters and improved left ventricular function and the effect of the NCD was better than the same dose of curcumin.