11 results on '"Xiaohong Si"'
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2. Best Clinical Approach for Stroke Management
- Author
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Shaun Wang and Xiaohong Si
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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3. Managing Secondary Schools in China.
- Author
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Bush, Tony, Coleman, Marianne, and Xiaohong, Si
- Abstract
Explores how secondary schools in China are managed using the results from case studies at three schools in the Shaanxi province while simultaneously comparing the findings to schools in Britain. Addresses the structure of the schools, the principal's role, the school's decision-making, and management techniques for the curriculum, finance, and admissions. (CMK)
- Published
- 1998
4. Homocysteine and Peripheral Neuropathy
- Author
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Favio Bumanlag, Rebecca T. Hsu, Jin Jun Luo, Anita K. Mehta, Yun Yuan, Nae J. Dun, and Xiaohong Si
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Peripheral neuropathy ,Homocysteine ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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5. Acute Cocaine Exposure and Cerebrovascular Diseases: A Retrospective Clinical Study and Literature Review
- Author
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Jin Jun Luo and Xiaohong Si
- Subjects
03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,0302 clinical medicine ,business.industry ,Emergency medicine ,Medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030227 psychiatry ,Retrospective data - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Predictions for the Potential Development of Artificial Intelligence in Chinese Education
- Author
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Peng, Liu, primary and Xiaohong, Si, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Fem1c genes: conserved members of the Fem1 gene family in vertebrates
- Author
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Tereza Ventura-Holman, Deyin Lu, Xiaohong Si, Joseph F. Maher, and Ernest B. Izevbigie
- Subjects
Male ,DNA, Complementary ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,Conserved sequence ,Mice ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Gene family ,Coding region ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Messenger ,Cloning, Molecular ,Gene ,Zebrafish ,Peptide sequence ,Conserved Sequence ,Caenorhabditis elegans ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Intron ,Chromosome Mapping ,Proteins ,Ubiquitin-Protein Ligase Complexes ,Exons ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,General Medicine ,Blotting, Northern ,biology.organism_classification ,Introns ,Genes ,Vertebrates ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 ,Female - Abstract
The fem-1 gene of Caenorhabditis elegans functions in a signaling pathway that controls sex determination. Homologs of fem-1 in mammals have been characterized, consisting of two family members, Fem1a and Fem1b. We report here on Fem1c, a third member of the Fem1 gene family, in three vertebrate species: human, mouse, and zebrafish. The proteins encoded by these Fem1c genes share >99% amino acid identity between human and mouse, 79% amino acid identity between mouse and zebrafish, and end with a C-terminal Arginine residue, which distinguishes them from other FEM-1 proteins reported thus far. The human and mouse Fem1c coding regions show conservation of intron-exon structure and expression pattern in adult tissues. Human FEM1C maps to 5q22, mouse Fem1c maps to chromosome 18, and zebrafish fem1c maps to Linkage Group 8. The Fem1c genes in vertebrates may play a conserved role in the development and/or physiologic function of these organisms.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Afferent Innervation of the Utricular Macula in Pigeons
- Author
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Xiaohong Si, M. Zakir, and J. David Dickman
- Subjects
Male ,Utricular macula ,Microinjections ,Physiology ,Biotin ,Vestibular Nerve ,Biology ,Calyx ,Hair Cells, Vestibular ,Afferent ,Animals ,Cellular organization ,Columbidae ,Fluorescent Dyes ,Biotinylated dextran amine ,General Neuroscience ,Dextrans ,Anatomy ,Axons ,Neuroepithelial cell ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,sense organs ,Neuroscience ,Brain Stem ,Type II Hair Cell ,Adaptive evolution - Abstract
Biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) was used to retrogradely label afferents innervating the utricular macula in adult pigeons. The pigeon utriclar macula consists of a large rectangular-shaped neuroepithelium with a dorsally curved anterior edge and an extended medioposterior tail. The macula could be demarcated into several regions based on cytoarchitectural differences. The striola occupied 30% of the macula and contained a large density of type I hair cells with fewer type II hair cells. Medial and lateral extrastriola zones were located outside the striola and contained only type II hair cells. A six- to eight-cell-wide band of type II hair cells existed near the center of the striola. The reversal line marked by the morphological polarization of hair cells coursed throughout the epithelium, near the peripheral margin, and through the center of the type II band. Calyx afferents innervated type I hair cells with calyceal terminals that contained between 2 and 15 receptor cells. Calyx afferents were located only in the striola region, exclusive of the type II band, had small total fiber innervation areas and low innervation densities. Dimorph afferents innervated both type I and type II hair cells with calyceal and bouton terminals and were primarily located in the striola region. Dimorph afferents had smaller calyceal terminals with few type I hair cells, extended fiber branches with bouton terminals and larger innervation areas. Bouton afferents innervated only type II hair cells in the extrastriola and type II band regions. Bouton afferents innervating the type II band had smaller terminal fields with fewer bouton terminals and smaller innervation areas than fibers located in the extrastriolar zones. Bouton afferents had the most bouton terminals on the longest fibers, the largest innervation areas with the highest innervation densities of all afferents. Among all afferents, smaller terminal innervation fields were observed in the striola and large fields were located in the extrastriola. The cellular organization and innervation patterns of the utricular maculae in birds appear to represent an organ in adaptive evolution, different from that observed for amphibians or mammals.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Response properties of pigeon otolith afferents to linear acceleration
- Author
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Xiaohong Si, Dora E. Angelaki, and J. D. Dickman
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acceleration ,Vestibular Nerve ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Accelerometer ,Transfer function ,Otolithic Membrane ,Orientation ,Utricle ,medicine ,Animals ,Neurons, Afferent ,Columbidae ,Cochlear Nerve ,Otolith ,Vestibular system ,Physics ,General Neuroscience ,Mathematical analysis ,Time constant ,Electrophysiology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Head Movements ,Space Perception - Abstract
In the present study, the sensitivity to sinusoidal linear accelerations in the plane of the utricular macula was tested in afferents. The head orientation relative to the translation axis was varied in order to determine the head position that elicited the maximal and minimal responses for each afferent. The response gain and phase values obtained to 0.5-Hz and 2-Hz linear acceleration stimuli were then plotted as a function of head orientation and a modified cosine function was fit to the data. From the best-fit cosine function, the predicted head orientations that would produce the maximal and minimal response gains were estimated. The estimated maximum response gains to linear acceleration in the utricular plane for the afferents varied between 75 and 1420 spikes s-1 g-1. The mean maximal gains for all afferents to 0.5-Hz and 2-Hz sinusoidal linear acceleration stimuli were 282 and 367 spikes s-1 g-1, respectively. The minimal response gains were essentially zero for most units. The response phases always led linear acceleration and remained constant for each afferent, regardless of head orientation. These response characteristics indicate that otolith afferents are cosine tuned and behave as one-dimensional linear accelerometers. The directions of maximal sensitivity to linear acceleration for the afferents varied throughout the plane of the utricle; however, most vectors were directed out of the opposite ear near the interaural axis. The response dynamics of the afferents were tested using stimulus frequencies ranging between 0.25 Hz and 10 Hz (0.1 g peak acceleration). Across stimulus frequencies, most afferents had increasing gains and constant phase values. These dynamic properties for individual afferents were fit with a simple transfer function that included three parameters: a mechanical time constant, a gain constant, and a fractional order distributed adaptation operator.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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10. Neurosurgery Case Review
- Author
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Homoud Aldahash, Richard Leblanc, Ossama Al-Mefty, Ahmad I. Lary, Burak Sade, Michel W. Bojanowski, John Winestone, Robert Herndon, Carmina M. Angeles, Melanie Hood, Rudiger Von Ritschl, Eric P. Roger, Alwin Camancho, William E. Krauss, Remi Nader, Jimmy D. Miller, Maya Nader, Qasim S. Al-Hinai, Fahad E. Alotaibi, Abdulrazag Ajlan, Ahmed Jaman Alzahrani, Reem Bunyan, Kevin Petrecca, Duane E. Haines, Bassem Yousef Sheikh, Jeffrey Atkinson, Pascal M. Jabbour, Sten Solander, Arlan Mintz, Ramez Malak, Paul A. Gardner, Domenic P. Esposito, Dennis G. Vollmer, Edward C. Benzel, Michel Lacroix, Stephen J. Hentschel, Nazer H. Qureshi, Abdulrahman Yaqub Alturki, Marc-Elie Nader, Joung H. Lee, Claude-Edouard Chatillon, Allen K. Sills, Glenn C. Hunter, Rolando F. Del Maestro, Samer K. Elbabaa, Andrew D. Parent, Eka Julianta Wahjoepramono, Dennis Klironomos, Brian Seaman, Daniel M. Prevedello, Amgad S. Hanna, Ricardo L. Carrau, Xiaohong Si, Robert L. Tiel, David Sinclair, Lissa Ogieglo, Ayman Abdullah Albanyan, Khalid N. Almusrea, Gaetan Moise, Adam Sauh Gee Wu, Jean-Pierre Farmer, Stephen M. Russell, Ahmed T. Abdelmoity, Lahbib B. Soualmi, Deepa Danan, Erol Veznedaroglu, Ahmad Al-Jishi, Abdulrahman J. Sabbagh, Dennis J. Sirhan, Ian F. Pollack, Gmaan Alzhrani, Christopher J. Winfree, José Luis Montes, Christopher P. Kellner, Hosam Al-Jehani, Cristian Gragnaniello, Hashem Al Hashemi, Isaac Chan, Julius July, Joseph A. Shehadi, Amin B. Kassam, Gustavo D. Luzardo, Judith Marcoux, Khurram A. Siddiqui, Nancy McLaughlin, Yasser I. Orz, Amgad Hanna, Fawziah A. Bamogaddam, Ali Raja, Shobhit Sinha, Sandeep Mittal, Robert A. Moumdjian, Maqsood Ahmad, Jie Ma, Carl H. Snyderman, Mahmoud A. Al Yamany, and Ravi Pande
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General surgery ,medicine ,Neurosurgery ,business ,Case review ,Surgery - Abstract
Neurosurgery case review : , Neurosurgery case review : , کتابخانه دیجیتال جندی شاپور اهواز
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Age-Dependent Reductions in the Level of Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein in the Prefrontal Cortex in Major Depression.
- Author
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Xiaohong Si, Miguel-Hidalgo, Jose Javier, O'Dwyer, Gillian, Stockmeier, Craig A, and Rajkowska, Grazyna
- Subjects
- *
NEUROGLIA , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *MENTAL depression , *PROTEINS , *ASTROCYTES , *WESTERN immunoblotting - Abstract
The density of glial cells is reduced in certain layers of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in major depressive disorder (MDD). Moreover, there are reductions in the packing density of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GEAR) immunoreactive astrocytes in the same cortical layers in younger subjects with MDD. The objective of the present study was to test if the level of GFAR is preferentially decreased in younger subjects with MDD, and whether GFAP levels are correlated with the age of onset of depression. Post-mortem brain tissue punches from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex were collected from 15 subjects with MDD and IS age-matched psychiatrically normal control subjects. Western blots were performed on gels containing duplicated samples from both subjects of each matched pair, and on gels containing samples at different ages from either the MDD or the control group. The GEAR level was calculated as the ratio of the optical density of GFAP bands to actin bands in subjects with MDD and nonpsychiatric controls. Levels of GEAR were significantly lower in subjects with MDD as compared to controls and this decrease was most prominent in subjects less than 60 years old at the time of death. In the MDD group, GEAR levels were positively correlated with age at the time of death and show a trend toward correlation with the age of onset of depression. These findings indicate that a decrease in levels of GFAP may contribute to the pathophysiology of MDD, particularly in subjects of relatively young age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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