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Institution

University of Saskatchewan

EducationSaskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
About: University of Saskatchewan is a education organization based out in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 25021 authors who have published 52579 publications receiving 1483049 citations. The organization is also known as: USask.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The purpose of this investigation was to assess the quality of life, oral function, and oral symptoms following radiotherapy for oropharyngeal cancer.
Abstract: Background Multiple oral complaints occur following radiotherapy for oropharyngeal cancer, but the frequency and severity of symptoms of dysfunction and discomfort are not well understood. The purpose of this investigation was to assess the quality of life, oral function, and oral symptoms following radiotherapy. Methods A general quality of life survey (the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer [EORTC] Quality of Life Questionnaire QLQ-C30), with an added oral symptom and function scale was mailed to 100 patients more than 6 months following radiotherapy. Results Sixty-five patients responded. Difficulty chewing or eating was reported by 43% of respondents. Dry mouth was reported by 91.8%, change in taste by 75.4%, dysphagia by 63.1%, altered speech by 50.8%, difficulty with dentures by 48.5%, and increased tooth decay by 38.5% of dentate patients. Pain was common (58.4%) and interfered with daily activities in 30.8%. Mood complaints were reported by approximately half the patients. Interference of the physical condition social activities was reported by 60%. The frequency of oral side effects correlated with radiation treatment fields and dose. Conclusion Oral complications following radiotherapy for head and neck cancer are common and affect quality of life. Use of a general function scale such as the EORTC questionnaire with the addition of disease/site specific scales may provide useful data on outcome of therapy and upon the complications associated with therapy and impact upon the quality of life. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Head Neck 21: 1–11, 1999.

294 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Horse CG is believed to act as an LH-like hormone to induce supplementary ovulation and/or luteinization of follicles in the mare and to have an exceptionally long half-life on CG compared to other glycoprotein hormones.
Abstract: Cells from the chorionic girdle of the equine trophoblast invade the maternal endometrium at day 36 of gestation and become established as secretory elements known as the endometrial cups. These structures, which persist for 40-60 days, produce a gonadotropin which can be found in circulation until about day 130 of gestation. This glycoprotein has been identified in the horse and the donkey, with the former having received much better characterization. It consists of 2 noncovalently linked peptide chains; an alpha-subunit of 96 amino acids, which is common to that found in other horse glycoprotein hormones. The beta-subunit of 149 amino acids is identical to horse LH beta. Horse CG is the most heavily glycosylated of the known pituitary and placental glycoprotein hormones. The alpha-subunit has two and the beta-subunit one N-linked glycosylation site, and the beta-chain has in excess of four O-linked glycosylation sites. The N-linked glycans have some oligosaccharides that are not found on other glycoprotein hormones. The sialic component of glycosylation confers an exceptionally long half-life on CG compared to other glycoprotein hormones. Horse CG has LH-like activity in horse receptor and in vitro bioassays. In spite of the amino acid homology, it has lower LH activity than does horse LH. Its most intriguing, and as yet unexplained, characteristic is its pronounced FSH and LH activity in species other than the horse. Horse CG binds to FSH receptors of virtually all mammalian species, other than the horse, in which it has been tested and will produce biological effects peculiar to FSH. It has similar and potent interaction with LH receptors. The structural basis of this duality is not known but may be related to the region 90-110 of the beta-chain. Horse CG is believed to be constitutively expressed by the trophoblastic cells until the endometrial cups degenerate. The role of CG in equine gestation is not completely understood. It is believed to act as an LH-like hormone to induce supplementary ovulation and/or luteinization of follicles in the mare. It has not been established whether CG or the accessory corpora lutea are necessary for successful horse pregnancy. They may serve as a redundant system to assure that there is sufficient secretion of the primary corpus luteum to maintain pregnancy until the placenta assumes its role as the principal steroidogenic organ of gestation.

294 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Based on this sample of species, it is inferred that C(4) photosynthesis has evolved independently several times, although a single origin with multiple reversals and several reacquisitions is only slightly less parsimonious.
Abstract: DNA sequence data from the chloroplast gene ndhF were analyzed to estimate the phylogeny of the subfamily Panicoideae, with emphasis on the tribe Paniceae. Our data suggest that the subfamily is divided into three strongly supported clades, corresponding to groups with largely identical base chromosome numbers. Relationships among the three clades are unclear. In unweighted parsimony analyses, the two major clades with x = 10 (Andropogoneae and x = 10 Paniceae) are weakly supported as sister taxa. The third large clade corresponds to x = 9 Paniceae. In analyses under implied weight, the two clades of Paniceae are sisters, making the tribe monophyletic. Neither resolution is strongly supported.Our molecular phylogenies are not congruent with previous classifications of tribes or subtribes. Based on this sample of species, we infer that C(4) photosynthesis has evolved independently several times, although a single origin with multiple reversals and several reacquisitions is only slightly less parsimonious. The phosphoenol pyruvate carboxykinase (PCK) subtype of C(4) photosynthesis has evolved only once, as has the NAD-malic enzyme (ME) subtype; all other origins are NADP-ME. Inflorescence bristles are apparently homologous in the genera Setaria and Pennisetum, contrary to opinions of most previous authors. Some genera, such as Digitaria, Echinochloa, and Homolepis are supported as monophyletic. The large genus Paspalum is shown to be paraphyletic, with Thrasya derived from within it. As expected, Panicum is polyphyletic, with lineages derived from multiple ancestors across the tree. Panicum subg. Panicum is monophyletic. Panicum subg. Dichanthelium, subg. Agrostoides, and subg. Phanopyrum are unrelated to each other, and none is monophyletic. Only Panicum subg. Dichanthelium sect. Dichanthelium, represented by P. sabulorum and P. koolauense, is monophyletic. Panicum subg. Megathyrsus, a monotypic subgenus including only the species P. maximum, is better placed in Urochloa, as suggested by other authors.

294 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that changes in the intestinal microbiome that may contribute to negative health outcomes when diets contain plant meal proteins can be minimized with additional processing of plant ingredients.

293 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employed the Attenuated Total Reflectance Fourier transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy to investigate mechanisms of boric acid and borate adsorption on hydrous ferric oxide (HFO).

293 citations


Authors

Showing all 25277 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Tomas Hökfelt158103395979
Frederick Wolfe119417101272
Christopher G. Goetz11665159510
John P. Giesy114116262790
Helmut Kettenmann10438040211
Paul M. O'Byrne10460556520
Susan S. Taylor10451842108
Keith A. Hobson10365341300
Mark S. Tremblay10054143843
James F. Fries10036983589
Gordon McKay9766161390
Jonathan D. Adachi9658931641
Wenjun Zhang9697638530
William C. Dement9634043014
Chris Ryan9597134388
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023173
2022350
20213,131
20202,913
20192,665
20182,479