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Institution

Gadjah Mada University

EducationYogyakarta, Indonesia
About: Gadjah Mada University is a education organization based out in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Adsorption. The organization has 17307 authors who have published 21389 publications receiving 116561 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Gajah Mada & Universitas Gadjah Mada.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the first location results, which suggest that the Yogyakarta earthquake occurred at 10-20 km distance east of the disaster area, outside of the topographic and structural depression along the Opak River.
Abstract: [1] Indonesia is repeatedly unsettled by severe volcano- and earthquake-related disasters, which are geologically coupled to the 5–7 cm/a tectonic convergence of the Australian plate beneath the Sunda Plate. On Saturday, 26 May 2006, the southern coast of central Java was struck by an earthquake at 2254 UTC in the Sultanate Yogyakarta. Although the magnitude reached only Mw = 6.4, it left more than 6,000 fatalities and up to 1,000,000 homeless. The main disaster area was south of Mt. Merapi Volcano, located within a narrow topographic and structural depression along the Opak River. The earthquake disaster area within the depression is underlain by thick volcaniclastic deposits commonly derived in the form of lahars from Mt. Merapi Volcano, which had a major influence leading to the disaster. In order to more precisely understand this earthquake and its consequences, a 3-month aftershock measurement campaign was performed from May to August 2006. We here present the first location results, which suggest that the Yogyakarta earthquake occurred at 10–20 km distance east of the disaster area, outside of the topographic depression. Using simple model calculations taking material heterogeneity into account we illustrate how soft volcaniclastic deposits may locally amplify ground shaking at distance. As the high degree of observed damage may have been augmented by the seismic response of the volcaniclastic Mt. Merapi deposits, this work implies that the volcano had an indirect effect on the level of earthquake destruction.

58 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: It is concluded that hookworm infection can interfere iron stores and anthelminthic therapy could be given to infected women before conception as public health strategy to improve iron status.
Abstract: A cohort study was carried out in Purworejo District, Central Java, Indonesia to investigate prevalence of anemia and low iron stores during pregnancy in relation to intestinal helminth infection. 442 pregnant women were followed until 5-10 weeks postpartum, during the period of April 1996 - August 1998. Information on intestinal helminths, hemoglobin and serum ferritin was collected each trimester. Highest prevalence of anemia in pregnancy (37.1%) was found in the second trimester, while the highest prevalence of low iron stores (49.5%) was found in the third trimester. Most pregnant women (69.7%) were infected with at least one species of pathogenic intestinal helminths. The most common helminth detected was Trichuris trichiura followed by Necator americanus (hookworm) and Ascaris lumbricoides. A significant negative association was found between hookworm infection and serum ferritin at the first trimester (p = 0.010). It is concluded that hookworm infection can interfere iron stores. Other causes of anemia among pregnant women should be considered. Anthelminthic therapy could be given to infected women before conception as public health strategy to improve iron status.

58 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on potential values, benefits, and limitations of microRNAs as new clinical markers for diagnosis, prognosis, prediction, and therapeutic monitoring in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Abstract: The discovery of small non-coding RNAs known as microRNAs has refined our view of the complexity of gene expression regulation. In hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the fifth most frequent cancer and the third leading cause of cancer death worldwide, dysregulation of microRNAs has been implicated in all aspects of hepatocarcinogenesis. In addition, alterations of microRNA expression have also been reported in non-cancerous liver diseases including chronic hepatitis and liver cirrhosis. MicroRNAs have been proposed as clinically useful diagnostic biomarkers to differentiate HCC from different liver pathologies and healthy controls. Unique patterns of microRNA expression have also been implicated as biomarkers for prognosis as well as to predict and monitor therapeutic responses in HCC. Since dysregulation has been detected in various specimens including primary liver cancer tissues, serum, plasma, and urine, microRNAs represent novel non-invasive markers for HCC screening and predicting therapeutic responses. However, despite a significant number of studies, a consensus on which microRNA panels, sample types, and methodologies for microRNA expression analysis have to be used has not yet been established. This review focuses on potential values, benefits, and limitations of microRNAs as new clinical markers for diagnosis, prognosis, prediction, and therapeutic monitoring in HCC.

58 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Children of the 2–5 year-group significantly had more problems in procedural anxiety, treatment anxiety and communication subscales than in older groups, and special care during intervention procedures is needed to promote their normal development.
Abstract: Background: Most studies on Health-related Quality of Life (HRQOL) in children with cancer were conducted in developed countries. The aims of this study were to assess the HRQOL in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients in Indonesia and to assess the influence of demographic and medical characteristics on HRQOL. Methods: After cultural linguistic validation, a cross-sectional study of HRQOL was conducted with childhood ALL patients and their guardians in various phases of treatment using the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) 4.0 Generic Core Scale and the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) 3.0 Cancer Module. Results: Ninety-eight guardians and 55 patients participated. The internal consistency of both scales ranged from 0.57 to 0.92. HRQOL of Indonesian patients was comparable with those in developed countries. There were moderate to good correlations between self-reports and proxyreports, however guardians tended to report worse HRQOL than patients. Children of the 2–5 year-group significantly had more problems in procedural anxiety, treatment anxiety and communication subscales than in older groups (p < 0.05). In the non-intensive phase HRQOL was significantly better than in the intensive phase, both in patient self-reports and proxy-reports. Conclusion: Younger children had more problems in procedural anxiety, treatment anxiety and communication subscales. Therefore, special care during intervention procedures is needed to promote their normal development. Psychosocial support should be provided to children and their parents to facilitate their coping with disease and its treatment.

58 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Sponge derived fungi are introduced as an emerging source for new bioactive metabolites, reflecting the currently growing interest in natural products from marine microorganisms.
Abstract: This review article presents our group's recent research findings with regard to bioactive natural products from marine sponges and tunicates, as well as from sponge- derived fungi. The organisms discussed originate in the Indopacific region, which has an exceptionally rich marine biodiversity. Major topics that are covered in our review include the chemical ecology of sponges, focusing on defense against fishes, as well as the isolation and identification of new bioactive constituents from sponges and tunicates. Sponge-derived fungi are introduced as an emerging source for new bioactive metabolites, reflecting the cur- rently growing interest in natural products from marine microorganisms.

58 citations


Authors

Showing all 17450 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Bunsho Ohtani7137119052
Lawrence H. Moulton7126620663
John M. Nicholls6623119014
Paul Meredith5930815489
Bernd M. Rode5244111367
Jan-Willem C. Alffenaar432946378
Bernd Lehmann412186027
Nawi Ng391524470
Jean-Philippe Gastellu-Etchegorry381924860
Mohd Hamdi381905846
Keiko Sasaki363195341
Jos G. W. Kosterink361675132
A. C. Hayward341066538
Eileen S. Scott331773187
Michael R. Dove331424334
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202346
2022201
20212,264
20203,105
20192,810
20182,588