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1. The use of in situ perfusion of the rat mesentery as a model to investigate vascular injury directly induced by drugs

2. Establishment of neural stem cells from fetal monkey brain for neurotoxicity testing.

3. Optimization of Detection of Gadodiamide Brain Retention in Rats Using Quantitative T 2 Mapping and Intraperitoneal Administration.

4. Quantitative neurotoxicology: Potential role of artificial intelligence/deep learning approach.

5. Global Neurotoxicity: Quantitative Analysis of Rat Brain Toxicity Following Exposure to Trimethyltin.

6. Application of microRNA profiling to understand sevoflurane-induced adverse effects on developing monkey brain.

7. Quantitative Neurotoxicology: An Assessment of the Neurotoxic Profile of Kainic Acid in Sprague Dawley Rats.

8. Hepatic Transcript Profiles of Cytochrome P450 Genes Predict Sex Differences in Drug Metabolism.

9. Microglial activation and responses to vasculature that result from an acute LPS exposure.

10. Effects of Xenon-Based Anesthetic Exposure on the Expression Levels of Polysialic Acid Neural Cell Adhesion Molecule (PSA-NCAM) on Human Neural Stem Cell-Derived Neurons.

11. Protective Effects of Xenon on Propofol-Induced Neurotoxicity in Human Neural Stem Cell-Derived Models.

12. Identification of whole blood mRNA and microRNA biomarkers of tissue damage and immune function resulting from amphetamine exposure or heat stroke in adult male rats.

13. Early life exposure to extended general anesthesia with isoflurane and nitrous oxide reduces responsivity on a cognitive test battery in the nonhuman primate.

14. Lipidomics reveals a systemic energy deficient state that precedes neurotoxicity in neonatal monkeys after sevoflurane exposure.

15. The time course of blood brain barrier leakage and its implications on the progression of methamphetamine-induced seizures.

16. Lipid profiling as an effective approach for identifying biomarkers/adverse events associated with pediatric anesthesia.

17. Microglial activation and vascular responses that are associated with early thalamic neurodegeneration resulting from thiamine deficiency.

18. Changes in the metabolome and microRNA levels in biological fluids might represent biomarkers of neurotoxicity: A trimethyltin study.

19. Corticosterone and exogenous glucose alter blood glucose levels, neurotoxicity, and vascular toxicity produced by methamphetamine.

20. Brain endothelial dysfunction following pyrithiamine induced thiamine deficiency in the rat.

21. Longitudinal diffusion tensor imaging of the rat brain after hexachlorophene exposure.

22. In Vivo Monitoring of Sevoflurane-induced Adverse Effects in Neonatal Nonhuman Primates Using Small-animal Positron Emission Tomography.

23. Vascular-directed responses of microglia produced by methamphetamine exposure: indirect evidence that microglia are involved in vascular repair?

24. Translational Biomarkers of Neurotoxicity: A Health and Environmental Sciences Institute Perspective on the Way Forward.

25. Ketamine-Induced Toxicity in Neurons Differentiated from Neural Stem Cells.

26. Evaluating the Stability of RNA-Seq Transcriptome Profiles and Drug-Induced Immune-Related Expression Changes in Whole Blood.

27. The use of time-lapse optical coherence tomography to image the effects of microapplied toxins on the retina.

28. Computational identification of a phospholipidosis toxicophore using (13)C and (15)N NMR-distance based fingerprints.

29. Amphetamine- and methamphetamine-induced hyperthermia: Implications of the effects produced in brain vasculature and peripheral organs to forebrain neurotoxicity.

30. Neuroprotective effect of the chemical chaperone, trehalose in a chronic MPTP-induced Parkinson's disease mouse model.

31. Protective effect of acetyl-L-carnitine on propofol-induced toxicity in embryonic neural stem cells.

32. Neurovascular changes in acute, sub-acute and chronic mouse models of Parkinson's disease.

33. Systemic administration of fluoro-gold for the histological assessment of vascular structure, integrity and damage.

34. Serum myoglobin, but not lipopolysaccharides, is predictive of AMPH-induced striatal neurotoxicity.

35. Comparison of the global gene expression of choroid plexus and meninges and associated vasculature under control conditions and after pronounced hyperthermia or amphetamine toxicity.

36. Ketamine-induced neuronal damage and altered N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor function in rat primary forebrain culture.

37. Inhalation Anesthesia-Induced Neuronal Damage and Gene Expression Changes in Developing Rat Brain.

38. A comparison of methylphenidate-, amphetamine-, and methamphetamine-induced hyperthermia and neurotoxicity in male Sprague-Dawley rats during the waking (lights off) cycle.

39. Biomarkers of endothelial cell activation: candidate markers for drug-induced vasculitis in patients or drug-induced vascular injury in animals.

40. Inhalation anesthetic-induced neuronal damage in the developing rhesus monkey.

41. Changes in gene expression after phencyclidine administration in developing rats: a potential animal model for schizophrenia.

42. Ketamine anesthesia during the first week of life can cause long-lasting cognitive deficits in rhesus monkeys.

43. Biomarkers of endothelial cell activation serve as potential surrogate markers for drug-induced vascular injury.

44. The use of in situ perfusion of the rat mesentery as a model to investigate vascular injury directly induced by drugs.

45. Endoplasmic reticulum stress responses differ in meninges and associated vasculature, striatum, and parietal cortex after a neurotoxic amphetamine exposure.

46. Gene expression profiling in the developing rat brain exposed to ketamine.

47. Prolonged exposure to ketamine increases neurodegeneration in the developing monkey brain.

48. A minimally invasive, translational biomarker of ketamine-induced neuronal death in rats: microPET Imaging using 18F-annexin V.

49. Differences in immunolocalization of Kim-1, RPA-1, and RPA-2 in kidneys of gentamicin-, cisplatin-, and valproic acid-treated rats: potential role of iNOS and nitrotyrosine.

50. Potential neurotoxicity of ketamine in the developing rat brain.

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