scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Louisville

EducationLouisville, Kentucky, United States
About: University of Louisville is a education organization based out in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 24600 authors who have published 49248 publications receiving 1573346 citations. The organization is also known as: UofL.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that autonomic alterations are important in human obesity, as they are in animal obesity, because a disordered homeostatic mechanism may promote excessive storage of energy by decreasing sympathetic activity, while defending against weight gain by decreasing parasympathetic activity.
Abstract: The cause of most cases of human obesity is unknown. Specific alterations in the activity of the autonomic nervous system may mediate and perhaps cause obesity in animal models. We therefore looked for alterations in autonomic activity in human obesity. Fifty-six healthy men with various percentages of body fat underwent autonomic testing while at rest. Significant correlations were found between the percentage of body fat and the variation in the R–R interval after beta-adrenergic blockade (r = -0.30, P<0.03), the heart rate (r = 0.30, P<0.03), the plasma norepinephrine concentration (r = -0.30, P<0.05), the plasma epinephrine concentration (r = -0.49, P<0.001), and the pupillary latency period (r = 0.39, P<0.01). Each of these variables reflects the activity of the sympathetic nervous system or parasympathetic nervous system or both. Depressions in sympathetic and parasympathetic activity were significantly but weakly associated with increasing percentages of body fat. These associations indica...

420 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of neutral nonresonant collisions on the shape, shift, and intensity of atomic spectral-line profiles is reviewed, by establishing reasonable assumptions about the relevant collision processes and by finding an expression for the Fourier transform of the line profile.
Abstract: The effect of neutral nonresonant collisions on the shape, shift, and intensity of atomic spectral-line profiles is reviewed. A general treatment for the study of an atomic spectral line is developed by establishing reasonable assumptions about the relevant collision processes and by finding an expression for the Fourier transform of the line profile. The authors look at parallel developments of other methods of calculation, consider special limits of practical interest, and illustrate numerical evaluations of complete line profiles. Interatomic potentials for use in line-profile calculations are described, and the problems imposed by nonadditivity and nonadiabaticity are also noted. The observation of line profiles by both conventional and tunable-laser techniques is surveyed. Representative experimental measurements of the widths and shifts of collision-broadened spectral line cores are tabulated, and the phenomena of satellites, oscillations, and power-law behavior of line wings are compared with theoretical expectations. The use of experimental results for the determination of excited atom-atom interactions, the prediction of collision broadening in stellar atmospheres, and the effect of foreign gases on laboratory standard wavelengths are also discussed.

419 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Mar 2000-Cancer
TL;DR: The Melanoma Staging Committee of the AJCC has proposed major revisions of the melanoma TNM and stage grouping criteria to better reflects independent prognostic factors that are used in clinical trials and in reporting the outcomes of various melanoma treatment modalities.
Abstract: The Melanoma Staging Committee of the AJCC has proposed major revisions of the melanoma TNM and stage grouping criteria. The committee members represent most of the major cooperative groups and cancer centers worldwide with a special interest in melanoma; the committee also collectively has had clinical experience with over 40,000 patients. The new staging system better reflects independent prognostic factors that are used in clinical trials and in reporting the outcomes of various melanoma treatment modalities. Major revisions include 1) melanoma thickness and ulceration, but not level of invasion, to be used in the T classification; 2) the number of metastatic lymph nodes, rather than their gross dimensions, the delineation of microscopic versus macroscopic lymph node metastases, and presence of ulceration of the primary melanoma to be used in the N classification; 3) the site of distant metastases and the presence of elevated serum LDH, to be used in the M classification; 4) an upstaging of all patients with Stage I,II, and III disease when a primary melanoma is ulcerated; 5) a merging of satellite metastases around a primary melanoma and in-transit metastases into a single staging entity that is grouped into Stage III disease; and 6) a new convention for defining clinical and pathologic staging so as to take into account the new staging information gained from intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy. The AJC Melanoma Staging Committee invites comments and suggestions regarding this proposed staging system before a final recommendation is made.

418 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Zhenmin Lei1, S. Mishra1, W. Zou1, B. Xu1, M. Foltz1, Xian Li1, Ch.V. Rao1 
TL;DR: Estradiol and progesterone replacement therapy in females and testosterone replacement in males, to determine whether phenotype and biochemical changes were a consequence of decreased gonadal steroid levels or due to a loss of LH signaling, revealed complete restoration of some and partial restoration of others, Nevertheless, the animals remained infertile.
Abstract: LH/hCG receptors were disrupted by gene targeting in embryonic stem cells. The disruption resulted in infertility in both sexes. The gonads contained no receptor mRNA or receptor protein. Serum LH levels were greatly elevated, and FSH levels were moderately elevated in both sexes; estradiol and progesterone levels decreased but were not totally suppressed in females; testosterone levels were dramatically decreased and estradiol levels moderately elevated in males. The external and internal genitalia were grossly underdeveloped in both sexes. Abnormalities included ambiguous vaginal opening, abdominal testes, micropenis, dramatically decreased weights of the gonads and reproductive tract, arrested follicular growth beyond antral stage, disarray of seminiferous tubules, diminished number and hypotrophy of Leydig cells, and spermatogenic arrest beyond the round spermatid stage. LH/hCG receptor gene disruption had no effect on FSH receptor mRNA levels in ovaries and testes, progesterone receptor (PR) levels in ovaries and androgen receptor (AR) levels in testes. However, it caused a dramatic decrease in StAR and estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) mRNA levels and an increase in ERbeta mRNA levels in both ovaries and testes. Estradiol and progesterone replacement therapy in females and testosterone replacement in males, to determine whether phenotype and biochemical changes were a consequence of decreased gonadal steroid levels or due to a loss of LH signaling, revealed complete restoration of some and partial restoration of others. Nevertheless, the animals remained infertile. It is anticipated that the LH receptor knockout animals will increase our current understanding of gonadal and nongonadal actions of LH and hCG.

418 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An outline and general introduction is provided to inform about the history, structure, working plan and intentions of the Metabolomics Standards Initiative.
Abstract: In 2005, the Metabolomics Standards Initiative has been formed. An outline and general introduction is provided to inform about the history, structure, working plan and intentions of this initiative. Comments on any of the suggested minimal reporting standards are welcome to be sent to the open email list Msi-workgroups-feedback@lists.sourceforge.net

417 citations


Authors

Showing all 24802 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert M. Califf1961561167961
Aaron R. Folsom1811118134044
Yang Gao1682047146301
Stephen J. O'Brien153106293025
James J. Collins15166989476
Anthony E. Lang149102895630
Sw. Banerjee1461906124364
Hermann Kolanoski145127996152
Ferenc A. Jolesz14363166198
Daniel S. Berman141136386136
Aaron T. Beck139536170816
Kevin J. Tracey13856182791
C. Dallapiccola1361717101947
Michael I. Posner134414104201
Alan Sher13248668128
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of Pittsburgh
201K papers, 9.6M citations

96% related

University of Pennsylvania
257.6K papers, 14.1M citations

95% related

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
185.3K papers, 9.9M citations

94% related

University of Southern California
169.9K papers, 7.8M citations

94% related

Duke University
200.3K papers, 10.7M citations

94% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202373
2022249
20212,489
20202,234
20192,193
20182,153