scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Texas Medical Branch

EducationGalveston, Texas, United States
About: University of Texas Medical Branch is a education organization based out in Galveston, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Virus. The organization has 22033 authors who have published 38268 publications receiving 1517502 citations. The organization is also known as: The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston & UTMB.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Rapidly adapting receptors (RARs) occur throughout the respiratory tract from the nose to the bronchi, responding to mechanical and chemical irritant stimuli, and to many inflammatory and immunological mediators.

226 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 1996-Virology
TL;DR: The data indicate that the virus induces a state of late G1 arrest, in which cyclin E/Cdk2 activates nucleotide metabolism and other biosynthetic processes that are necessary for viral replication.

226 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Female gender, knowledge about HPV, and attitudes about vaccination were independently associated with family physicians' intention to recommend HPV vaccines.

225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review aims to provide an update on knowledge of WNV biology that can be used to highlight the advances in the field during the past 2 years and help to define the questions that academic, industrial, and public-health communities must address in development of measures to control WNV disease.
Abstract: Since the publication of a comprehensive review on West Nile virus (WNV) in 2002, there has been substantial progress in understanding of transmission, epidemiology, and geographic distribution of the virus and manifestations of disease produced by the infection. There have also been advances in development of diagnostic and therapeutic agents and vaccines. Nevertheless, many questions about the epidemic remain unanswered, and several new issues have arisen--for example: whether the epidemic will increase as the virus spreads to the Pacific coast of North America; whether arthropods other than mosquitoes will act as vectors for the infection; whether WNV will spread to South America and cause an epidemic there; whether the distribution of WNV in Asia and Europe will increase; and whether adaptation of WNV to new ecosystems will produce viruses with altered genetic and phenotypic properties. This review aims to provide an update on knowledge of WNV biology that can be used to highlight the advances in the field during the past 2 years and help to define the questions that academic, industrial, and public-health communities must address in development of measures to control WNV disease.

225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The dorsal funiculus in cervical spinal cords of rats from 3 to 120 days postnatal was studied in order to document and quantitate glial cell development and axonal growth as related to the initiation and progress of central myelination.
Abstract: The dorsal funiculus in cervical spinal cords of rats from 3 to 120 days postnatal was studied in order to document and quantitate glial cell development and axonal growth as related to the initiation and progress of central myelination. Within the dorsal funiculus are three major and distinct tracts, each having distinct developmental trends and adult characteristics in terms of fiber sizes and amount of myelin. These tracts are the cuneate and gracile fasciculi and the cortico-spinal tracts. Glial cell counts and cross-sectional surface area determinations of each tract at increasing ages show that the initial rate of glial population increase is similar. However, each tract is unique in terms of the age at which a maximum population density is reached and the rate at which the expected population dilution takes place. An electron-microscopic examination indicates that oligodendrocytes constitute over 85% of the total glial population throughout the development period surveyed. As such, these cells are primarily responsible for the population density changes. The diameters of unmyelixgnated fibers, promyelin fibers and some myelinated fibers in these tracts were measured at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 120 days postnatal. This was done both for the purpose of relating glial population density changes with the initiation and decline of active myelination, and for determining whether or not a critical diameter for myelination exists in the CNS as was found in peripheral nerves (Matthews, '68). For each tract there is a characteristic sequence of events involving not only myelination, but also changes in diameter distribution just prior to the appearance of myelin and during the period of active myelin formation. These events coincide with the concentration and dilution of the glial population, but it is also evident that there is no critical and constant diameter in the CNS above which all axons are myelinated and below which all are unmyelinated. Myelin appears first on larger axons, but as the animal matures, it is found on progressively smaller axons until between 20 and 120 days, axons 0.2–0.4 μ in diameter acquire myelin. Thus, myelination begins with axons destined to be large and then extends down to those which enlarge very little prior to acquiring myelin and remain very small even in adult animals. Finally, from the determination, in adult rats, of the number of axons and oligodendrocytes in a defined volume of each tract and an estimation of internode length, the ratio of internodes to oligodendrocytes was calculated. The specific values obtained could vary by as much as ±50% and are only meant to serve as indicators of a trend. However, it is suggested that the number of internodes per oligodendrocyte may be inversely proportional to the length of the internode.

225 citations


Authors

Showing all 22143 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Stuart H. Orkin186715112182
Eric R. Kandel184603113560
John C. Morris1831441168413
Joseph Biederman1791012117440
Richard A. Gibbs172889249708
Timothy A. Springer167669122421
Gabriel N. Hortobagyi1661374104845
Roberto Romero1511516108321
Charles B. Nemeroff14997990426
Peter J. Schwartz147647107695
Clifford J. Woolf14150986164
Thomas J. Smith1401775113919
Edward C. Holmes13882485748
Jun Lu135152699767
Henry T. Lynch13392586270
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Baylor College of Medicine
94.8K papers, 5M citations

97% related

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
79.2K papers, 4.7M citations

97% related

University of Alabama at Birmingham
86.7K papers, 3.9M citations

97% related

National Institutes of Health
297.8K papers, 21.3M citations

97% related

University of California, San Francisco
186.2K papers, 12M citations

97% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202330
2022196
20211,617
20201,487
20191,298
20181,152