Institution
University of Nebraska Omaha
Education•Omaha, Nebraska, United States•
About: University of Nebraska Omaha is a education organization based out in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 4526 authors who have published 8905 publications receiving 213914 citations. The organization is also known as: UNO & University of Omaha.
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05 Jun 1998TL;DR: This article reviewed the literature on religious and spiritual content in social work education, report the results of a study of the development of spirituality-related courses in M.S.W. programs, and discuss the implications of this research for curriculum development.
Abstract: Summary. Recognition is growing of the relevance of spirituality to social work practice, which has led to recommendations that spiritual and religious content be included in the M.S.W. curriculum. This article will review the literature on religious and spiritual content in social work education, report the results of a study of the development of spirituality‐related courses in M.S.W. programs, and discuss the implications of this research for curriculum development.
89 citations
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TL;DR: It is indicated that plant functional groups and plant biomass are useful in predicting methane flux differences across plant species, while soil methanogen community structure showed no distinguishable patterns.
89 citations
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TL;DR: The results of the current study indicate that the spirorchiid parasites of marine turtles are similarly derived from a freshwater ancestor and the basal position of the marine transmitted Austrobilharzia and Ornithobilharzian clade suggests that schistosomatids arose after a marine turtle blood fluke ancestor successfully colonised birds.
89 citations
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TL;DR: None of the six tetraoxanes active in vitro were as effective as either 1 or 2 in vivo; at single doses of 100 mg/kg most possessed little to no vivo activity in mice infected with Plasmodium berghei.
Abstract: Eleven novel dispiro-1,2,4,5-tetraoxanes 3 bearing unsaturated and polar functional groups were designed to enhance the oral antimalarial activity of the prototype tetraoxane 2 (WR 148999). With the exception of 3g and 3h, tetraoxanes 3 were available via the peroxidation of corresponding cyclohexanone derivatives in H2SO4/CH3CN. Tetraoxanes 3g and 3h were prepared by hydrolysis of ester tetraoxanes 3e and 3i, respectively. Five of the 11 tetraoxanes were inactive, but six tetraoxanes had IC50 values of 6−26 nM against the K1 and NF54 strains of Plasmodium falciparum compared to corresponding IC50 values of 28 and 39 nM for 2, and 10 and 12 nM for artemisinin (1). Ester tetraoxane 3e was the most active in vitro, some 2-fold more potent than 1. However, none of the six tetraoxanes active in vitro were as effective as either 1 or 2 in vivo; at single doses of 100 mg/kg most possessed little to no vivo activity in mice infected with Plasmodium berghei. Unsaturated tetraoxane 3a was uniquely more active when...
89 citations
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TL;DR: The incidence of intellectual dysfunction, the association with midline anomalies of the brain, and growth failure all suggest that wide cavum septum pellucidum may represent part of a spectrum of midline brain anomalies.
89 citations
Authors
Showing all 4588 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Darell D. Bigner | 130 | 819 | 90558 |
Dan L. Longo | 125 | 697 | 56085 |
William B. Dobyns | 105 | 430 | 38956 |
Eamonn Martin Quigley | 103 | 685 | 39585 |
Howard E. Gendelman | 101 | 567 | 39460 |
Alexander V. Kabanov | 99 | 447 | 34519 |
Douglas T. Fearon | 94 | 278 | 35140 |
Dapeng Yu | 94 | 745 | 33613 |
John E. Wagner | 94 | 488 | 35586 |
Zbigniew K. Wszolek | 93 | 576 | 39943 |
Surinder K. Batra | 87 | 564 | 30653 |
Frank L. Graham | 85 | 255 | 39619 |
Jing Zhou | 84 | 533 | 37101 |
Manish Sharma | 82 | 1407 | 33361 |
Peter F. Wright | 77 | 252 | 21498 |