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Institution

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

Education
About: University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 14634 authors who have published 19610 publications receiving 1041794 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: HBV prevalence decreased among US children, which reflected the impact of global and domestic vaccination, but it changed little among adults, and approximately 730,000 US residents are chronically infected.
Abstract: Results. During the period 1999–2006, age-adjusted prevalences of anti-HBc (4.7%) and HBsAg (0.27%) were not statistically different from what they were during 1988–1994 (5.4% and 0.38%, respectively). The prevalence of anti-HBc decreased among persons 6–19 years of age (from 1.9% to 0.6%; ) and 20–49 years of age P ! .01 (from 5.9% to 4.6%; ) but not among persons 50 years of age (7.2% vs 7.7%). During 1999–2006, the P ! .05 prevalence of anti-HBc was higher among non-Hispanic blacks (12.2%) and persons of “Other” race (13.3%) than it was among non-Hispanic whites (2.8%) or Mexican Americans (2.9%), and it was higher among foreign-born participants (12.2%) than it was among US-born participants (3.5%). Prevalence among US-born children 6–19 years of age (0.5%) did not differ by race or ethnicity. Disparities between US-born and foreign-born children were smaller during 1999–1996 (0.5% vs 2.0%) than during 1988–1994 (1.0% vs 12.8%). Among children 6–19 years of age, 56.7% had markers of vaccine-induced immunity. Conclusions. HBV prevalence decreased among US children, which reflected the impact of global and domestic vaccination, but it changed little among adults, and ∼730,000 US residents (95% confidence interval, 550,000– 940,000) are chronically infected.

338 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A gene, nudF, which is required for nuclear migration during vegetative growth as well as development is cloned, suggesting that the LIS-1 gene product may have a function similar to that of NUDF and supports previous findings to suggest that nuclear migration may play a role in neuronal migration.
Abstract: During a study of the genetics of nuclear migration in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans, we cloned a gene, nudF, which is required for nuclear migration during vegetative growth as well as development. The NUDF protein level is controlled by another protein NUDC, and extra copies of the nudF gene can suppress the nudC3 mutation. nudF encodes a protein with 42% sequence identity to the human LIS-1 (Miller-Dieker lissencephaly-1) gene, which is required for proper neuronal migration during brain development. This strong similarity suggests that the LIS-1 gene product may have a function similar to that of NUDF and supports previous findings to suggest that nuclear migration may play a role in neuronal migration.

337 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is argued that a scientific basis is necessary for the concept of recovery to have a significant long-term impact on the way that schizophrenia is understood and treated and to improve the impact of recovery-based initiatives.

337 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A simple algorithm is provided for guiding physicians in the management of sexual dysfunction in patients with varying degrees of cardiac risk, including patients with a history of uncomplicated myocardial infarction.
Abstract: Sexual dysfunction is highly prevalent in both sexes and adversely affects patients' quality of life and well being. Given the frequent association between sexual dysfunction and cardiovascular disease, in addition to the potential cardiac risk of sexual activity itself, a consensus panel was convened to develop recommendations for clinical management of sexual dysfunction in patients with cardiovascular disease. Based upon a review of the research and presentations by invited experts, a classification system was developed for stratification of patients into high, low, and intermediate categories of cardiac risk. The large majority of patients are in the low-risk category, which includes patients with (1) controlled hypertension; (2) mild, stable angina; (3) successful coronary revascularization; (4) a history of uncomplicated myocardial infarction (MI); (5) mild valvular disease; and (6) no symptoms and /=3 risk factors for coronary artery disease. These patients should receive further cardiologic evaluation before restratification into the low- or high-risk category. Finally, patients in the high-risk category include those with (1) unstable or refractory angina; (2) uncontrolled hypertension; (3) congestive heart failure (class III or IV); (4) very recent MI (<2 weeks); (5) high-risk arrhythmias; (6) obstructive cardiomyopathies; and (7) moderate-to-severe valvular disease. These patients should be stabilized by specific treatment for their cardiac condition before resuming sexual activity or being treated for sexual dysfunction. A simple algorithm is provided for guiding physicians in the management of sexual dysfunction in patients with varying degrees of cardiac risk.

337 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In conclusion, isolated type IV collagen can reconstitute in vitro the polymeric molecular architecture it assumes in vivo, and it is proposed that super helix formation is an inherent characteristic of lateral assembly.
Abstract: To determine molecular architecture of the type IV collagen network in situ, the human amniotic basement membrane has been studied en face in stereo relief by high resolution unidirectional metal shadow casting aided by antibody decoration and morphometry. The appearance of the intact basement membrane is that of a thin sheet in which there are regions of branching strands. Salt extraction further exposes these strands to reveal an extensive irregular polygonal network that can be specifically decorated with gold-conjugated anti-type IV collagen antibody. At high magnification one sees that the network, which contains integral (9-11 nm net diameter) globular domains, is formed in great part by lateral association of monomolecular filaments to form branching strands of variable but narrow diameters. Branch points are variably spaced apart by an average of 45 nm with 4.4 globular domains per micron of strand length. Monomolecular filaments (1.7-nm net diameter) often appear to twist around each other along the strand axis; we propose that super helix formation is an inherent characteristic of lateral assembly. A previous study (Yurchenco, P. D., and H. Furthmayr. 1984. Biochemistry. 23:1839) presented evidence that purified murine type IV collagen dimers polymerize to form polygonal arrays of laterally as well as end-domain-associated molecules. The architecture of this polymer is similar to the network seen in the amnion, with lateral binding a major contributor to each. Thus, to a first approximation, isolated type IV collagen can reconstitute in vitro the polymeric molecular architecture it assumes in vivo.

337 citations


Authors

Showing all 14639 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
John Q. Trojanowski2261467213948
Virginia M.-Y. Lee194993148820
Danny Reinberg14534268201
Michael F. Holick145767107937
Tasuku Honjo14171288428
Arnold J. Levine139485116005
Aaron T. Beck139536170816
Charles J. Yeo13667276424
Jerry W. Shay13363974774
Chung S. Yang12856056265
Paul G. Falkowski12737864898
Csaba Szabó12395861791
William C. Roberts122111755285
Bryan R. Cullen12137150901
John R. Perfect11957352325
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20226
202113
20208
201917
201823
201736