Institution
Urmia University of Medical Sciences
About: Urmia University of Medical Sciences is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 2779 authors who have published 3699 publications receiving 32401 citations.
Topics: Population, Cancer, Medicine, Randomized controlled trial, Health care
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Global health has steadily improved over the past 30 years as measured by age-standardised DALY rates, and there has been a marked shift towards a greater proportion of burden due to YLDs from non-communicable diseases and injuries.
5,802 citations
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Christopher J L Murray1, Christopher J L Murray2, Christopher J L Murray3, Aleksandr Y. Aravkin2 +2269 more•Institutions (286)
TL;DR: The largest declines in risk exposure from 2010 to 2019 were among a set of risks that are strongly linked to social and economic development, including household air pollution; unsafe water, sanitation, and handwashing; and child growth failure.
3,059 citations
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TL;DR: To assess current trajectories towards the GPW13 UHC billion target—1 billion more people benefiting from UHC by 2023—the authors estimated additional population equivalents with UHC effective coverage from 2018 to 2023, and quantified frontiers of U HC effective coverage performance on the basis of pooled health spending per capita.
304 citations
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Christopher J L Murray1, Charlton S K H Callender1, Xie Rachel Kulikoff1, Vinay Srinivasan1 +1092 more•Institutions (424)
TL;DR: This work estimated population in 195 locations by single year of age and single calendar year from 1950 to 2017 with standardised and replicable methods and used the cohort-component method of population projection, with inputs of fertility, mortality, population, and migration data.
287 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the involvement of the various key signaling pathways in bone regeneration and discuss the current clinical methods in bone repair and regeneration following bone injuries, and briefly introduce concepts in fracture repair and recovery following bone injury, and then discuss the currently clinical methods for bone regeneration.
Abstract: Regenerative medicine has sparked interest in potential strategies for bone repair. Bone defects are widespread and could be caused by trauma, congenital malformations, infections, and surgery. Although bone has a large self-healing capacity, some defects or fractures are too big to regenerate. To regenerate bone structures which can be used for treatment of patients, bone growth must be induced by a number of bioactive implantable materials, cell types and intracellular, and extracellular molecular signaling pathways. Since mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and their differentiation during remodeling processes have important roles in bone regeneration, it is believed that understanding molecular signaling pathways involved is crucial to the development of bone implants, bone substitute materials, and cell-based scaffolds for bone regeneration. In this review, we briefly introduce concepts in fracture repair and regeneration following bone injuries, and then discuss the current clinical methods in bone regeneration. In the next section, we review the involvement of the various key signaling pathways in bone regeneration.
264 citations
Authors
Showing all 2779 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Amir H. Mohammadi | 62 | 698 | 16044 |
Mohammad Ramezani | 58 | 500 | 12232 |
Miklas Scholz | 43 | 375 | 7915 |
Mahmoud Bahmani | 38 | 214 | 4759 |
Ghobad Moradi | 30 | 223 | 14379 |
Maryam Majidinia | 28 | 91 | 2292 |
Masoud Foroutan | 27 | 87 | 4163 |
Hassan Malekinejad | 26 | 129 | 2641 |
Farkhondeh Sharif | 26 | 144 | 2550 |
Shahram Khademvatan | 25 | 87 | 1421 |
Noore Alam | 25 | 30 | 33756 |
Mir Davood Omrani | 23 | 245 | 2230 |
Alireza Mehdizadeh | 21 | 131 | 1621 |
Ali Ghasemi | 21 | 121 | 1769 |
Mohammad Alizadeh | 20 | 147 | 1482 |