Search

Showing total 1,214 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Journal american journal of physiology: renal physiology Remove constraint Journal: american journal of physiology: renal physiology
1,214 results

Search Results

3. Void spot assay: recommendations on the use of a simple micturition assay for mice.

4. Two classic papers in acid-abase physiology: contributions of R. F. Pitts, R. S. Alexander, and W. D. Lotspeich.

5. Introduction to the classic papers commemorating the APS Legacy Project.

6. Void spot assay procedural optimization and software for rapid and objective quantification of rodent voiding function, including overlapping urine spots.

7. Renal-specific loss of ferroportin disrupts iron homeostasis and attenuates recovery from acute kidney injury.

8. Evidence that methylglyoxal and receptor for advanced glycation end products are implicated in bladder dysfunction of obese diabetic ob/ob mice.

9. Evaluating the voiding spot assay in mice: a simple method with complex environmental interactions.

10. Practical notes on popular statistical tests in renal physiology.

11. Guidelines for microbiome studies in renal physiology.

12. 50 Years of renal physiology from one man and the perfused tubule: Maurice B. Burg.

13. Whole body acid-base modeling revisited.

15. Spontaneous voiding by mice reveals strain-specific lower urinary tract function to be a quantitative genetic trait.

16. Parallel microarray profiling identifies ErbB4 as a determinant of cyst growth in ADPKD and a prognostic biomarker for disease progression.

17. Fgfr2 is integral for bladder mesenchyme patterning and function.

18. The use of mammalian cortical kidney slices for the study of tubule secretion: a pioneering step toward understanding organic anion transport.

19. An online tool for calculation of free-energy balance for the renal inner medulla.

20. Renal potassium transport: the pioneering studies of Gerhard Giebisch.

21. CORRIGENDUM.

22. Control of ENaC ubiquitination.

23. Diffusion tensor MRI is sensitive to fibrotic injury in a mouse model of oxalate-induced chronic kidney disease.

24. Cilia-deficient renal tubule cells are primed for injury with mitochondrial defects and aberrant tryptophan metabolism.

25. Validation of an organ mapping antibody panel for cyclical immunofluorescence microscopy on normal human kidneys.

26. Herniation of the tuft with outgrowth of vessels through the glomerular entrance in diabetic nephropathy damages the juxtaglomerular apparatus.

27. A knowledge base of vasopressin actions in the kidney.

28. Experimental validation of the countercurrent model of urinary concentration.

29. Deletion or pharmacological blockade of TLR4 confers protection against cyclophosphamide-induced mouse cystitis.

30. The macula densa prorenin receptor is essential in renin release and blood pressure control.

31. Long-term follow-up of TREK-1 KO mice reveals the development of bladder hypertrophy and impaired bladder smooth muscle contractility with age.

32. In chronic kidney disease altered cardiac metabolism precedes cardiac hypertrophy.

33. Renal vascular control during normothermia and passive heat stress does not differ between healthy younger men and women.

35. Physiological roles of claudins in kidney tubule paracellular transport.

36. UAB-UCSD O'Brien Center for Acute Kidney Injury Research.

37. Collecting duct water permeability inhibition by EGF is associated with decreased cAMP, PKA activity, and AQP2 phosphorylation at Ser269.

38. Guidelines on antibody use in physiology research.

39. Current perspective on circadian function of the kidney.

40. Podocyte injury at young age causes premature senescence and worsens glomerular aging.

41. Impaired hemodynamic renal reserve response following recovery from established acute kidney injury and improvement by hydrodynamic isotonic fluid delivery.

42. Tubular dysfunction impairs renal excretion of pseudouridine in diabetic kidney disease.

43. Vasopressin V2 receptor, tolvaptan, and ERK1/2 phosphorylation in the renal collecting duct.

44. Ethical Policies and Procedures.

48. Recent advances in renal hypoxia: insights from bench experiments and computer simulations.

49. Does pharmacological activation of 5-HT1A receptors improve urine flow rate in female rats?

50. RAS and sex differences in diabetic nephropathy.