514 results on '"Rennard, S. I."'
Search Results
102. Cigarette smoke extract attenuates endothelium-dependent arteriolar dilatation in vivo
103. Diffuse pulmonary alveolar hemorrhage after bone marrow transplantation: radiographic findings in 39 patients.
104. Bronchial epithelial cells release monocyte chemotactic activity in response to smoke and endotoxin.
105. Dibutyryl cAMP, prostaglandin E2, and antioxidants protect cultured bovine bronchial epithelial cells from endotoxin
106. Role of neutrophils in endotoxin-mediated microvascular injury in hamsters
107. Vitronectin in Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid Is Increased in Patients with Interstitial Lung Disease
108. Antioxidants attenuate endotoxin-induced microvascular leakage of macromolecules in vivo
109. Complement activation by cigarette smoke
110. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid obtained from smokers exhibits increased monocyte chemokinetic activity
111. Acetaldehyde-mediated cilia dysfunction in bovine bronchial epithelial cells
112. Transplanted BM and BM side population cells contribute progeny to the lung and liver in irradiated mice.
113. Fibroblasts and monocyte macrophages contract and degrade three-dimensional collagen gels in extended co-culture.
114. The role of cigarette smoke in the pathogenesis of asthma and as a trigger for acute symptoms.
115. Fibronectin mediates cell attachment to Clq: a mechanism for the localization of fibrosis in inflammatory disease.
116. NIH conference. Airway inflammation.
117. Cellular and metabolic specificity in the interaction of adhesion proteins with collagen and with cells.
118. Experimental treatments for asthma.
119. Aldehydes in Cigarette Smoke React with the Lipid Peroxidation Product Malonaldehyde to Form Fluorescent Protein Adducts on Lysines
120. Detection and Quantification of Depurinated Benzo[a]pyrene-Adducted DNA Bases in the Urine of Cigarette Smokers and Women Exposed to Household Coal Smoke
121. Isolation of a heparan sulfate-containing proteoglycan from basement membrane.
122. Production of fibronectin by the human alveolar macrophage: mechanism for the recruitment of fibroblasts to sites of tissue injury in interstitial lung diseases.
123. Swarm rat chondrosarcoma proteoglycans. Purification of aggregates by zonal centrifugation of preformed cesium sulfate gradients.
124. Lysophosphatidic acid regulation of cyclic AMP accumulation in cultured human airway smooth muscle cells.
125. Antibodies to laminin in Chagas' disease.
126. Role of fibronectin as a growth factor for fibroblasts.
127. The Goodpasture-like syndrome in mice induced by intravenous injections of anti-type IV collagen and anti-laminin antibody
128. Patterns of pulmonary structural remodeling after experimental paraquat toxicity. The morphogenesis of intraalveolar fibrosis
129. Current concepts of the pathogenesis of fibrosis
130. Clinical guidelines and indications for bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL): pulmonary malignancies
131. Environmental lung disease and the interstitium
132. Pathogenesis of the granulomatous lung diseases
133. Pulmonary oxygen toxicity. Bronchoalveolar lavage demonstration of early parameters of alveolitis
134. Reprogramming Of COPD Fibroblasts Through Formation Of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells
135. Paraquat-induced pulmonary fibrosis. Role of the alveolitis in modulating the development of fibrosis
136. Measurement of tumour markers in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid
137. EARLY DETECTION OF CANCER BY NMR ANALYSIS OF BLOOD-PLASMA
138. Alveolar macrophages in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis have glucocorticoid receptors, but glucocorticoid therapy does not suppress alveolar macrophage release of fibronectin and alveolar macrophage derived growth factor
139. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Underdiagnosed, underinvestigated, inappropriately managed? (multiple letters) [2]
140. The clinical use of BAL in patients with pulmonary infections
141. Mutual inhibition by TGF-β and IL-4 in cultured human bronchial epithelial cells
142. The lung matrix and inflammation
143. Estimation of volume of epithelial lining fluid recovered by lavage using urea as marker of dilution
144. Bronchial epithelial cells release chemotactic activity for lymphocytes
145. Pulmonary Oxygen Toxicity
146. Bronchial epithelial cells release chemoattractant activity for monocytes
147. Fibroblasts: important producers and targets of inflammatory prostaglandins in the lungs
148. Normal human alveolar macrophages obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage have a limited capacity to release interleukin-1.
149. INTRACELLULAR DEGRADATION OF COLLAGEN
150. Lung fibroblasts produce chemotactic factors for bronchial epithelial cells
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