Institution
University of California, Davis
Education•Davis, California, United States•
About: University of California, Davis is a education organization based out in Davis, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 78770 authors who have published 180033 publications receiving 8064158 citations. The organization is also known as: UC Davis & UCD.
Topics: Population, Gene, Poison control, Context (language use), Medicine
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: This review discusses several methods of estimating tissue hardness using internal or external means of applying stress (force per unit area) and several associated methods of detecting the resulting strain (fractional length change) in an effort to image a tissue mechanical property, such as Young's modulus.
Abstract: For millennia, physicians have used palpation as a part of the physical examination to detect pathology. The ubiquitous presence of "stiffer" tissue associated with pathology often represents an early warning sign for disease, as in the cases of breast or prostate cancer. Very often tumors are found at surgery that were occult even with modern imaging instruments. This implies that methods for estimating "hardness" of tissues would add a weapon to the medical armamentarium. To this end, this review discusses several methods of estimating tissue hardness using internal or external means of applying stress (force per unit area) and several associated methods of detecting the resulting strain (fractional length change) in an effort to image a tissue mechanical property, such as Young's modulus (ratio of stress to strain). Some investigators have developed methods of estimating stiffness or modulus, but most methods result in qualitative images of stiffness. Nevertheless, such estimates may add a great deal of information not currently available to the current field of medical imaging.
692 citations
••
University of California, Los Angeles1, Cornell University2, National Institutes of Health3, University of California, Santa Cruz4, Tel Aviv University5, Museum and Institute of Zoology6, Polish Academy of Sciences7, University of California, Davis8, University of New South Wales9, University of Calgary10, Affymetrix11, Waltham Centre for Pet Nutrition12, Alcatel-Lucent13, Yunnan University14, Kunming Institute of Zoology15
TL;DR: It is shown that dog breeds share a higher proportion of multi-locus haplotypes unique to grey wolves from the Middle East, indicating that they are a dominant source of genetic diversity for dogs rather than wolves from east Asia, as suggested by mitochondrial DNA sequence data.
Abstract: Advances in genome technology have facilitated a new understanding of the historical and genetic processes crucial to rapid phenotypic evolution under domestication. To understand the process of dog diversification better, we conducted an extensive genome-wide survey of more than 48,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms in dogs and their wild progenitor, the grey wolf. Here we show that dog breeds share a higher proportion of multi-locus haplotypes unique to grey wolves from the Middle East, indicating that they are a dominant source of genetic diversity for dogs rather than wolves from east Asia, as suggested by mitochondrial DNA sequence data. Furthermore, we find a surprising correspondence between genetic and phenotypic/functional breed groupings but there are exceptions that suggest phenotypic diversification depended in part on the repeated crossing of individuals with novel phenotypes. Our results show that Middle Eastern wolves were a critical source of genome diversity, although interbreeding with local wolf populations clearly occurred elsewhere in the early history of specific lineages. More recently, the evolution of modern dog breeds seems to have been an iterative process that drew on a limited genetic toolkit to create remarkable phenotypic diversity.
692 citations
••
TL;DR: In patients with acute decompensated heart failure, a positive cardiac troponin test is associated with higher in-hospital mortality, independently of other predictive variables.
Abstract: Background Cardiac troponin provides diagnostic and prognostic information in acute coronary syndromes, but its role in acute decompensated heart failure is unclear. The purpose of our study was to describe the association between elevated cardiac troponin levels and adverse events in hospitalized patients with acute decompensated heart failure. Methods We analyzed hospitalizations for acute decompensated heart failure between October 2001 and January 2004 that were recorded in the Acute Decompensated Heart Failure National Registry (ADHERE). Entry criteria included a troponin level that was obtained at the time of hospitalization in patients with a serum creatinine level of less than 2.0 mg per deciliter (177 μmol per liter). A positive troponin test was defined as a cardiac troponin I level of 1.0 μg per liter or higher or a cardiac troponin T level of 0.1 μg per liter or higher. Results Troponin was measured at the time of admission in 84,872 of 105,388 patients (80.5%) who were hospitalized for acute ...
692 citations
••
TL;DR: It is shown that increasing genotypic diversity in a habitat-forming species (the seagrass Zostera marina) enhances community resistance to disturbance by grazing geese and that genetic diversity, like species diversity, may be most important for enhancing the consistency and reliability of ecosystems by providing biological insurance against environmental change.
Abstract: Motivated by recent global reductions in biodiversity, empirical and theoretical research suggests that more species-rich systems exhibit enhanced productivity, nutrient cycling, or resistance to disturbance or invasion relative to systems with fewer species. In contrast, few data are available to assess the potential ecosystem-level importance of genetic diversity within species known to play a major functional role. Using a manipulative field experiment, we show that increasing genotypic diversity in a habitat-forming species (the seagrass Zostera marina) enhances community resistance to disturbance by grazing geese. The time required for recovery to near predisturbance densities also decreases with increasing eelgrass genotypic diversity. However, there is no effect of diversity on resilience, measured as the rate of shoot recovery after the disturbance, suggesting that more rapid recovery in diverse plots is due solely to differences in disturbance resistance. Genotypic diversity did not affect ecosystem processes in the absence of disturbance. Thus, our results suggest that genetic diversity, like species diversity, may be most important for enhancing the consistency and reliability of ecosystems by providing biological insurance against environmental change.
691 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effects of both the composition and configuration of land cover features on land surface temperature (LST) in Baltimore, MD, USA, using correlation analyses and multiple linear regressions.
691 citations
Authors
Showing all 79538 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Eric S. Lander | 301 | 826 | 525976 |
Ronald C. Kessler | 274 | 1332 | 328983 |
George M. Whitesides | 240 | 1739 | 269833 |
Ronald M. Evans | 199 | 708 | 166722 |
Virginia M.-Y. Lee | 194 | 993 | 148820 |
Scott M. Grundy | 187 | 841 | 231821 |
Julie E. Buring | 186 | 950 | 132967 |
Patrick O. Brown | 183 | 755 | 200985 |
Anil K. Jain | 183 | 1016 | 192151 |
John C. Morris | 183 | 1441 | 168413 |
Douglas R. Green | 182 | 661 | 145944 |
John R. Yates | 177 | 1036 | 129029 |
Barry Halliwell | 173 | 662 | 159518 |
Roderick T. Bronson | 169 | 679 | 107702 |
Hongfang Liu | 166 | 2356 | 156290 |