Institution
Gdańsk Medical University
Education•Gdańsk, Poland•
About: Gdańsk Medical University is a education organization based out in Gdańsk, Poland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 4893 authors who have published 11216 publications receiving 260523 citations.
Topics: Population, Cancer, Medicine, Blood pressure, Transplantation
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Metal and metal oxide NPs in dermatology and cosmetology and their interactions with skin cells are reviewed, which shows very promising clinical potential to serve as controlled release and delivery systems for drugs/active substances.
113 citations
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TL;DR: In the TC3 or IC3 WT population, atezo monotherapy improved median OS by 7.1 mo, and the primary endpoint of OS is tested hierarchically in wild-type (WT; EGFR/ALK-negative) pts, which was met with significant improvement with OS improvement.
113 citations
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Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences1, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation2, Gdańsk Medical University3, National Research Council4, University of Nebraska–Lincoln5, University of Alberta6, Washington State University7, United States Department of Agriculture8, University of Hamburg9
TL;DR: In this article, the authors showed that Arabidopsis LPCAT enzymes catalyzed the acylation and de-acylation of both sn positions of PC, with a preference for the sn-2 position.
113 citations
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TL;DR: The data suggest that tumor-specific reinstatement of p53 function targets the “Achilles heel” of cancer cells (i.e. their dependence on glycolysis), which could contribute to the tumor-selective killing ofcancer cells by pharmacologically activated p53.
112 citations
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TL;DR: The morphology of the claustrum was studied by stereological methods in representatives of five mammalian orders (Insectivora, Rodentia, Lagomorpha, Carnivora and Primates) and differences in the morphology and cellular structure may suggest differences in function of the two parts of the nucleus.
Abstract: The morphology of the claustrum was studied by stereological methods in representatives of five mammalian orders (Insectivora, Rodentia, Lagomorpha, Carnivora and Primates). In each species under study, a dorsal and a ventral part of the nucleus can be distinguished. Based on differences in shape and separation from surrounding structures, five morphological types of the claustrum occur. The claustrum of Insectivora and some rodents represents the least complicated morphological type. The nucleus is very poorly separated from the surrounding structures. The human claustrum is morphologically the most complicated, although the two above-mentioned principal divisions are apparent. The ventrally situated paraamygdalar part of the human claustrum may correspond to the endopiriform nucleus or ventral part of the claustrum of other mammals, because of its morphological characteristics and connections with the limbic system. In guinea pigs, traditionally classified as members of the Rodentia, a characteristic morphological type of the claustrum is present. This observation may support arguments questioning the current position of this species in mammalian classification. Based on stereological studies, the increase of the claustral volume that occurs with increase of the hemispheric volume is significantly smaller than the increase of the isocortical volume and larger than the increase of the allocortical volume. The increase of the volume of the dorsal and ventral parts of the claustrum does not differ significantly in the species under study. Neurons of the claustrum represent differentiated morphology. The numerical density of neurons in the dorsal part of the claustrum is significantly higher than in the ventral one. Differences in the morphology and cellular structure of the two parts of the claustrum may suggest differences in function of the two parts of the nucleus, most probably concerned with transfer of information among various cortical regions. Changes in the claustrum, a cortico-related structure, that occur with increased brain volume, may suggest that its development is less dynamic than that of the isocortex.
112 citations
Authors
Showing all 4927 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Magdi H. Yacoub | 109 | 1267 | 52431 |
Virend K. Somers | 106 | 615 | 54203 |
Felix Mitelman | 95 | 578 | 35416 |
Andrzej Slominski | 91 | 469 | 27900 |
Nils Mandahl | 86 | 427 | 25006 |
Fredrik Mertens | 84 | 406 | 28705 |
Enriqueta Felip | 83 | 622 | 53364 |
Pieter E. Postmus | 81 | 384 | 24039 |
Wilhelm Kriz | 73 | 222 | 19335 |
Godefridus J. Peters | 73 | 523 | 28315 |
Jacek Jassem | 73 | 602 | 35976 |
Piotr Rutkowski | 72 | 563 | 42218 |
Thomas Frodl | 70 | 258 | 16469 |
Eric J. Velazquez | 70 | 396 | 27539 |
Argye E. Hillis | 68 | 398 | 22230 |