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Ovarian Cysts. --- Ovariectomy. --- Pregnancy Complications.
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Spaying --- Sterilization --- Ovariectomy --- Cats --- Dogs --- Animals
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Abdomen --- Ovariectomy. --- Reproductive System, surgery. --- Surgery.
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Spaying --- Sterilization --- Ovariectomy --- Cats --- Dogs --- Animals
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This open access book looks at the dramatic history of ovariotomy, an operation to remove ovarian tumours first practiced in the early nineteenth century. Bold and daring, surgeons who performed it claimed to be initiating a new era of surgery by opening the abdomen. Ovariotomy soon occupied a complex position within medicine and society, as an operation which symbolised surgical progress, while also remaining at the boundaries of ethical acceptability. This book traces the operation’s innovation, from its roots in eighteenth-century pathology, through the denouncement of those who performed it as ‘belly-rippers’, to its rapid uptake in the 1880s, when ovariotomists were accused of over-operating. Throughout the century, the operation was never a hair’s breadth from controversy.
History. --- Social history. --- Medicine. --- Abdomen --- Sociology. --- History of Science. --- Social History. --- History of Medicine. --- Abdominal Surgery. --- Gender Studies. --- Social theory --- Social sciences --- Abdominal surgery --- Laparotomy --- Clinical sciences --- Medical profession --- Human biology --- Life sciences --- Medical sciences --- Pathology --- Physicians --- Descriptive sociology --- Social conditions --- Social history --- History --- Sociology --- Annals --- Auxiliary sciences of history --- Surgery. --- Health Workforce --- Medicine—History. --- Abdominal surgery. --- Medicine—History --- Ovariectomy --- Ovariotomy --- Castration, Female --- Female castration --- Oophorectomy --- Ovaries --- Sterilization of women --- Surgery
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This book provides a resource for the scientist or medical professional interested in the topic of insulin resistance. With a mix of review and primary data articles, emerging paradigms in insulin resistance are highlighted. The topics are succinctly presented, and distinct viewpoints are represented. An introduction to the Special Issue that provides summaries of the studies included, is provided by the Guest Editor, Dr. Susan Burke, and her colleague at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Dr. Jason Collier.
Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- epicardial adipose tissue --- hypertrophy of adipocytes --- CAD severity --- adipokines --- insulin resistance --- insulin-degrading enzyme --- pancreas --- liver --- insulin receptor --- glucose transporters --- acute intermittent porphyria --- carbohydrate loading therapy --- hyperinsulinemia --- fast-acting insulin --- experimental liver-targeted insulin --- hyperinsulinaemia --- osteocalcin --- beta-hydroxybutyrate --- phenotype --- stages --- serotonin --- glucagon-like peptide-1 --- glucagon --- type 2 diabetes --- hyperglycaemia --- apoptosis --- endoplasmic reticulum stress --- glucosamine --- pancreatic β-cell dysfunction --- ovariectomy --- raloxifene --- Negr1 --- obesity --- metabolic disease --- metabolomics --- glucose intolerance --- genetic models --- beta hydroxybutyrate --- osteoporosis --- fragility fractures --- bone mineral density --- osteocalin --- vitamin D --- collagen --- hydroxyapatite --- diabetes --- inflammation --- thiazolidinedione --- n/a
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The sustainable exploitation of marine biodiversity is one structural column of the “blue economy”, and the discovery of new compounds and materials to be used in biomedicine is considered one of the most strategic activities, within an economic context. An exhaustive selection of the different typologies of approaches used by marine biotechnologists to develop research on these topics are demonstrated in the eight original articles and two reviews comprising this Special Issue. The reported scientific publications describe the discovery of new compounds for cancer therapy or for the control of bacterial virulence. Different new uses of marine chitin or chitosan-based materials are also shown for the first time, as well as novel green techniques for the extraction of compounds from marine algae or from fishery waste, which are described in the two reviews.
Technology: general issues --- Extracellular Polymeric Substances --- hydrogel --- mesenchymal stem cells --- biomaterials --- enzyme --- omega 3 --- PUFA --- Trichormus variabilis --- Cyanobacteria --- mechanochemical synthesis --- chitosan --- laser stereolithography --- long-term stability --- scaffold --- tissue reaction --- chitin --- scaffolds --- biological materials --- demosponges --- Pseudoceratina arabica --- microalgae --- biodiversity --- bioactive compounds --- green extractions --- pharmaceutical --- secondary metabolites --- biofuels --- antibiofilm --- fucoidan --- motility --- nanoparticles --- Pseudomonas aeruginosa --- virulence factors --- n-3 fatty acids --- brain --- α-Chitin --- prodigiosin --- anti-tumors --- Serratia marcescens --- bioprocessing --- echinochrome A --- estradiol --- extracellular matrix --- vocal fold --- ovariectomy --- marine polymers --- ionic liquids --- tissue engineering --- membranes --- hydrogels --- sponges --- Chondrosin --- Chondrosia reniformis --- marine toxin --- cytotoxic protein --- Porifera --- marine --- microbes --- cancer --- prevention --- therapy --- in vitro --- in vivo --- clinical studies
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The sustainable exploitation of marine biodiversity is one structural column of the “blue economy”, and the discovery of new compounds and materials to be used in biomedicine is considered one of the most strategic activities, within an economic context. An exhaustive selection of the different typologies of approaches used by marine biotechnologists to develop research on these topics are demonstrated in the eight original articles and two reviews comprising this Special Issue. The reported scientific publications describe the discovery of new compounds for cancer therapy or for the control of bacterial virulence. Different new uses of marine chitin or chitosan-based materials are also shown for the first time, as well as novel green techniques for the extraction of compounds from marine algae or from fishery waste, which are described in the two reviews.
Technology: general issues --- Extracellular Polymeric Substances --- hydrogel --- mesenchymal stem cells --- biomaterials --- enzyme --- omega 3 --- PUFA --- Trichormus variabilis --- Cyanobacteria --- mechanochemical synthesis --- chitosan --- laser stereolithography --- long-term stability --- scaffold --- tissue reaction --- chitin --- scaffolds --- biological materials --- demosponges --- Pseudoceratina arabica --- microalgae --- biodiversity --- bioactive compounds --- green extractions --- pharmaceutical --- secondary metabolites --- biofuels --- antibiofilm --- fucoidan --- motility --- nanoparticles --- Pseudomonas aeruginosa --- virulence factors --- n-3 fatty acids --- brain --- α-Chitin --- prodigiosin --- anti-tumors --- Serratia marcescens --- bioprocessing --- echinochrome A --- estradiol --- extracellular matrix --- vocal fold --- ovariectomy --- marine polymers --- ionic liquids --- tissue engineering --- membranes --- hydrogels --- sponges --- Chondrosin --- Chondrosia reniformis --- marine toxin --- cytotoxic protein --- Porifera --- marine --- microbes --- cancer --- prevention --- therapy --- in vitro --- in vivo --- clinical studies
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The sustainable exploitation of marine biodiversity is one structural column of the “blue economy”, and the discovery of new compounds and materials to be used in biomedicine is considered one of the most strategic activities, within an economic context. An exhaustive selection of the different typologies of approaches used by marine biotechnologists to develop research on these topics are demonstrated in the eight original articles and two reviews comprising this Special Issue. The reported scientific publications describe the discovery of new compounds for cancer therapy or for the control of bacterial virulence. Different new uses of marine chitin or chitosan-based materials are also shown for the first time, as well as novel green techniques for the extraction of compounds from marine algae or from fishery waste, which are described in the two reviews.
Extracellular Polymeric Substances --- hydrogel --- mesenchymal stem cells --- biomaterials --- enzyme --- omega 3 --- PUFA --- Trichormus variabilis --- Cyanobacteria --- mechanochemical synthesis --- chitosan --- laser stereolithography --- long-term stability --- scaffold --- tissue reaction --- chitin --- scaffolds --- biological materials --- demosponges --- Pseudoceratina arabica --- microalgae --- biodiversity --- bioactive compounds --- green extractions --- pharmaceutical --- secondary metabolites --- biofuels --- antibiofilm --- fucoidan --- motility --- nanoparticles --- Pseudomonas aeruginosa --- virulence factors --- n-3 fatty acids --- brain --- α-Chitin --- prodigiosin --- anti-tumors --- Serratia marcescens --- bioprocessing --- echinochrome A --- estradiol --- extracellular matrix --- vocal fold --- ovariectomy --- marine polymers --- ionic liquids --- tissue engineering --- membranes --- hydrogels --- sponges --- Chondrosin --- Chondrosia reniformis --- marine toxin --- cytotoxic protein --- Porifera --- marine --- microbes --- cancer --- prevention --- therapy --- in vitro --- in vivo --- clinical studies
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