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  1. Book ; Online: Antigenic characterization of plasmodia using monoclonal antibodies / by L. H. Perrin, R. Dayal, M. Loche

    Perrin, L. H / Dayal, R / Loche, M / World Health Organization

    1981  

    Abstract: Documents : WHO/MAL/77.884, WHO/MAL/77.885 (WHO/VBC/77.659), WHO/MAL/77.886-77.890, WHO/MAL/77.891 (WHO/VBC/77.676), WHO/MAL/77.892-77.895, WHO/MAL/78.896 (WHO/VBC/78.683), WHO/MAL/78.897 (WHO/VBC/78.686), WHO/MAL/78.898, WHO/MAL/78.899 (WHO/VBC/78.690), ...

    Abstract Documents : WHO/MAL/77.884, WHO/MAL/77.885 (WHO/VBC/77.659), WHO/MAL/77.886-77.890, WHO/MAL/77.891 (WHO/VBC/77.676), WHO/MAL/77.892-77.895, WHO/MAL/78.896 (WHO/VBC/78.683), WHO/MAL/78.897 (WHO/VBC/78.686), WHO/MAL/78.898, WHO/MAL/78.899 (WHO/VBC/78.690), WHO/MAL/78.900-78.902, WHO/MAL/78.903 (WHO/VBC/78.696), WHO/MAL/78.904 (WHO/VBC/78.704), WHO/MAL/79.905-79.907, WHO/MAL/79.908 (WHO/VBC/79.723), WHO/MAL/79.909-79.912, WHO/MAL/79.913 (WHO/VBC/79.740), WHO/MAL/79.914, WHO/MAL/80.915, WHO/MAL/80.916 (WHO/SCHISTO/80.47), WHO/MAL/80.917, WHO/MAL/80.918 (WHO/VBC/80.771) - (WHO/VBC/77.672), (WHO/VBC/78.688) - WHO/MAL/80.919 - 80.921, WHO/MAL/80.922 (WHO/VBC/80.774), WHO/MAL/80.924 - 80.929, WHO/MAL/81.930-81.973, WHO/MAL/81.974 (WHO/VBC/81.816), WHO/MAL/81.975, bound in 1 vol

    Summary in French p. 8

    WHO/MAL/81.938

    11 p.
    Keywords Malaria ; Plasmodium ; Antigens ; Antibodies ; Monoclonal ; Parasitic Diseases and their Control ; prevention and control immunology
    Language English
    Publisher Geneva : World Health Organization
    Document type Book ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Book ; Online: Antigenic characterization of plasmodia using monoclonal antibodies / by L. H. Perrin, R. Dayal, M. Loche

    Perrin, L. H / Dayal, R / Loche, M / World Health Organization

    1981  

    Abstract: Documents : WHO/MAL/77.884, WHO/MAL/77.885 (WHO/VBC/77.659), WHO/MAL/77.886-77.890, WHO/MAL/77.891 (WHO/VBC/77.676), WHO/MAL/77.892-77.895, WHO/MAL/78.896 (WHO/VBC/78.683), WHO/MAL/78.897 (WHO/VBC/78.686), WHO/MAL/78.898, WHO/MAL/78.899 (WHO/VBC/78.690), ...

    Abstract Documents : WHO/MAL/77.884, WHO/MAL/77.885 (WHO/VBC/77.659), WHO/MAL/77.886-77.890, WHO/MAL/77.891 (WHO/VBC/77.676), WHO/MAL/77.892-77.895, WHO/MAL/78.896 (WHO/VBC/78.683), WHO/MAL/78.897 (WHO/VBC/78.686), WHO/MAL/78.898, WHO/MAL/78.899 (WHO/VBC/78.690), WHO/MAL/78.900-78.902, WHO/MAL/78.903 (WHO/VBC/78.696), WHO/MAL/78.904 (WHO/VBC/78.704), WHO/MAL/79.905-79.907, WHO/MAL/79.908 (WHO/VBC/79.723), WHO/MAL/79.909-79.912, WHO/MAL/79.913 (WHO/VBC/79.740), WHO/MAL/79.914, WHO/MAL/80.915, WHO/MAL/80.916 (WHO/SCHISTO/80.47), WHO/MAL/80.917, WHO/MAL/80.918 (WHO/VBC/80.771) - (WHO/VBC/77.672), (WHO/VBC/78.688) - WHO/MAL/80.919 - 80.921, WHO/MAL/80.922 (WHO/VBC/80.774), WHO/MAL/80.924 - 80.929, WHO/MAL/81.930-81.973, WHO/MAL/81.974 (WHO/VBC/81.816), WHO/MAL/81.975, bound in 1 vol

    Summary in French p. 8

    WHO/MAL/81.938

    11 p.
    Keywords Malaria ; Plasmodium ; Antigens ; Antibodies ; Monoclonal ; Parasitic Diseases and their Control ; prevention and control immunology
    Language English
    Publisher World Health Organization
    Document type Book ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article ; Online: The Role of Primary Care in Advancing Civic Engagement and Health Equity: A Conceptual Framework.

    Habib, Daniel R S / Klein, Lauren M / Perrin, Eliana M / Perrin, Andrew J / Johnson, Sara B

    The Milbank quarterly

    2023  Volume 101, Issue 3, Page(s) 731–767

    Abstract: Policy Points Health and civic engagement are reciprocally and longitudinally linked: Poor health is associated with less civic engagement. Well-established social drivers of health and health inequality such as inadequate access to health care, poverty, ...

    Abstract Policy Points Health and civic engagement are reciprocally and longitudinally linked: Poor health is associated with less civic engagement. Well-established social drivers of health and health inequality such as inadequate access to health care, poverty, racism, housing instability, and food insecurity are also drivers of lower civic engagement. A robust primary care system can play a key role in advancing civic engagement (e.g., voting, volunteerism, community service, and political involvement) at the population level but has received little attention. Policy and practice solutions at the individual and structural levels should support and leverage potential synergies among health equity, civic engagement, and primary care.
    Context: Health and civic engagement are linked. Healthier people may be able to participate more fully in civic life, although those with poorer health may be motivated to address the roots of their health challenges using collective action. In turn, civically active people may experience better health, and societies with more equitable health and health care may experience healthier civic life. Importantly, a robust primary care system is linked to greater health equity. However, the role of primary care in advancing civic engagement has received little study.
    Methods: We synthesize current literature on the links among health, civic engagement, and primary care. We propose a conceptual framework to advance research and policy on the role of primary care in supporting civic engagement as a means for individuals to actualize their health and civic futures.
    Findings: Current literature supports relationships between health equity and civic engagement. However, this literature is primarily cross-sectional and confined to voting. Our integrative conceptual framework highlights the interconnectedness of primary care structures, health equity, and civic engagement and supports the crucial role of primary care in advancing both civic and health outcomes. Primary care is a potentially fruitful setting for cultivating community and individual health and power by supporting social connectedness, self-efficacy, and collective action.
    Conclusions: Health and civic engagement are mutually reinforcing. Commonalities between social determinants of health and civic engagement constitute an important convergence for policy, practice, and research. Responsibility for promoting both health and civic engagement is shared by providers, community organizations, educators, and policymakers, as well as democratic and health systems, yet these entities rarely work in concert. Future work can inform policy and practice to bolster primary care as a means for promoting health and civic engagement.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Health Equity ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Health Status Disparities ; Poverty ; Primary Health Care
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-06-22
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 632829-5
    ISSN 1468-0009 ; 0887-378X
    ISSN (online) 1468-0009
    ISSN 0887-378X
    DOI 10.1111/1468-0009.12661
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: The NASEM Report on Implementing High-Quality Primary Care-Implications for Pediatrics.

    Coker, Tumaini R / Perrin, James M

    JAMA pediatrics

    2021  Volume 176, Issue 3, Page(s) 221–222

    MeSH term(s) Child ; Humans ; Pediatrics ; Primary Health Care ; Quality of Health Care
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-11-15
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2701223-2
    ISSN 2168-6211 ; 2168-6203
    ISSN (online) 2168-6211
    ISSN 2168-6203
    DOI 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2021.4594
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: How far has diabetes-related foot disease research progressed in Australia? A bibliometric review (1970-2023).

    Tehan, Peta E / Perrin, Byron M / Lazzarini, Peter A / Al-Busaidi, Ibrahim S / Carroll, Matthew R

    Journal of foot and ankle research

    2024  Volume 17, Issue 2, Page(s) e12012

    Abstract: Background: Diabetes-related foot disease (DFD) is a leading cause of the Australian and global disease burdens and requires proportionate volumes of research to address. Bibliometric analyses are rigorous methods for exploring total research ... ...

    Abstract Background: Diabetes-related foot disease (DFD) is a leading cause of the Australian and global disease burdens and requires proportionate volumes of research to address. Bibliometric analyses are rigorous methods for exploring total research publications in a field to help identify volume trends, gaps and emerging areas of need. This bibliometric review aimed to explore the volume, authors, institutions, journals, collaborating countries, research types and funding sources of Australian publications investigating DFD over 50 years.
    Methods: A systematic search of the Scopus
    Results: Overall, 332 eligible publications were included. Publication volume increased steadily over time, with largest volumes (78%) and a 7-fold increase over the last decade. Mean co-authors per publication was 5.6, mean journal impact factor was 2.9 and median citation was 9 (IQR2-24). Most frequent authors were Peter Lazzarini (14%), Vivienne Chuter (8%) and Jonathon Golledge (7%). Most frequent institutions affiliated were Queensland University Technology (33%), University Sydney (30%) and James Cook University (25%). Most frequent journals published in were Journal Foot and Ankle Research (17%), Diabetic Medicine (7%), Journal Diabetes and its Complications (4%) and International Wound Journal (4%). Most frequent collaborating countries were the United Kingdom (9%), the Netherlands (6%) and the United States (5%). Leading research types were etiology (38%), treatment evaluation (25%) and health services research (13%). Leading funding sources were no funding (60%), internal institution (16%) and industry/philanthropic/international (10%).
    Conclusions: Australian DFD research increased steadily until more dramatic increases were seen over the past decade. Most research received no funding and mainly investigated etiology, existing treatments or health services. Australian DFD researchers appear to be very productive, particularly in recent times, despite minimal funding indicating their resilience. However, if the field is to continue to rapidly grow and address the very large national DFD burden, much more research funding is needed in Australia, especially targeting prevention and clinical trials of new treatments in DFD.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Australia ; Bibliometrics ; Journal Impact Factor ; Diabetes Mellitus ; Foot Diseases
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-04-17
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2440706-9
    ISSN 1757-1146 ; 1757-1146
    ISSN (online) 1757-1146
    ISSN 1757-1146
    DOI 10.1002/jfa2.12012
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: On the Addition of Multifunctional Methacrylate Monomers to an Acrylic-Based Infusible Resin for the Weldability of Acrylic-Based Glass Fibre Composites.

    Perrin, Henri / Bodaghi, Masoud / Berthé, Vincent / Vaudemont, Régis

    Polymers

    2023  Volume 15, Issue 5

    Abstract: The melt strength of ... ...

    Abstract The melt strength of Elium
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-02-28
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2527146-5
    ISSN 2073-4360 ; 2073-4360
    ISSN (online) 2073-4360
    ISSN 2073-4360
    DOI 10.3390/polym15051250
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article: On the Analyses of Cure Cycle Effects on Peel Strength Characteristics in Carbon High-

    Perrin, Henri / Vaudemont, Régis / Bodaghi, Masoud

    Materials (Basel, Switzerland)

    2023  Volume 16, Issue 23

    Abstract: In this study, a high- ...

    Abstract In this study, a high-
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-11-25
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2487261-1
    ISSN 1996-1944
    ISSN 1996-1944
    DOI 10.3390/ma16237340
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article ; Online: Moderators of short- and long-term outcomes in panic control treatment and panic-focused psychodynamic psychotherapy.

    Sandell, Rolf / Falkenström, Fredrik / Svensson, Martin / Nilsson, Thomas / Johansson, Håkan / Viborg, Gardar / Perrin, Sean

    Psychotherapy research : journal of the Society for Psychotherapy Research

    2024  , Page(s) 1–11

    Abstract: Objective: The objective was to test the hypothesis that externalizing and internalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning styles at baseline moderate panic severity and overall mental illness as short-term and long-term outcomes of two panic-focused ... ...

    Abstract Objective: The objective was to test the hypothesis that externalizing and internalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning styles at baseline moderate panic severity and overall mental illness as short-term and long-term outcomes of two panic-focused psychotherapies, Panic Control Treatment (PCT) and Panic-Focused Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (PFPP).
    Method: Participants were 108 adults with DSM-IV Panic Disorder with or without Agoraphobia (PD/A) who were randomized to treatment in a trial of PCT and PFPP. Piece-wise/segmented multilevel modeling was used to test three-way interactions (Treatments × Moderator × Time), with participants and therapists as random factors. Outcome variables were clinician-rated panic severity and self-rated mental illness post-treatment and during follow-up.
    Results: Patients' externalizing (but not internalizing) helpfulness beliefs moderated mental illness outcomes during follow-up (but not during treatment); low levels of Externalization were facilitative for PFPP but not PCT. Internalizing and externalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning style did not moderate clinician-rated panic severity, whether short- or long-term.
    Conclusions: These results suggest that helpfulness beliefs and learning style have limited use in assignment to either PCT or PFPP for PD/A. Although further research is needed, low levels of helpfulness beliefs about externalizing coping may play a role in mental illness outcomes for PFPP.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-30
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1080323-3
    ISSN 1468-4381 ; 1050-3307
    ISSN (online) 1468-4381
    ISSN 1050-3307
    DOI 10.1080/10503307.2023.2294888
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article ; Online: Diphenylphosphinylhydroxylamine (DPPH) Affords Late-Stage S-imination to access free-NH Sulfilimines and Sulfoximines.

    Gunasekera, Shanal / Pryyma, Alla / Jung, Jimin / Greenwood, Rebekah / Patrick, Brian O / Perrin, David M

    Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)

    2024  Volume 63, Issue 13, Page(s) e202314906

    Abstract: Sulfilimines, as potential aza-isosteres of sulfoxides, are valued as building blocks, auxiliaries, ligands, bioconjugation handles, and as precursors to versatile S(VI) scaffolds including sulfoximines and sulfondiimines. Here, we report a thioether ... ...

    Abstract Sulfilimines, as potential aza-isosteres of sulfoxides, are valued as building blocks, auxiliaries, ligands, bioconjugation handles, and as precursors to versatile S(VI) scaffolds including sulfoximines and sulfondiimines. Here, we report a thioether imination methodology that exploits O-(diphenylphosphinyl)hydroxyl amine (DPPH). Under mild, metal-free, and biomolecule-compatible conditions, DPPH enables late-stage S-imination on peptides, natural products, and a clinically trialled drug, and shows both excellent chemoselectivity and broad functional group tolerance. This methodological report is extended to an efficient and high-yielding one-pot reaction for accessing free-NH sulfoximines with diverse substrates including ones of potential clinical importance. In the presence of a rhodium catalyst, sulfoxides are S-iminated in higher yields to afford free-NH sulfoximines. S-imination was validated on an oxidatively delicate amatoxin to give sulfilimine and sulfoximine congeners. Interestingly, these new sulfilimine and sulfoximine-amatoxins show cytotoxicity. This method is further extended to create sulfilimine and sulfoximine-Fulvestrant and buthionine analogues.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-02-19
    Publishing country Germany
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2011836-3
    ISSN 1521-3773 ; 1433-7851
    ISSN (online) 1521-3773
    ISSN 1433-7851
    DOI 10.1002/anie.202314906
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article: Ex Vivo Comparison of a UV-Polymerizable Methacrylate Adhesive versus an Inverting Pattern as the Second Layer of a Two-Layer Hand-Sewn Jejunal Anastomosis in Horses: A Pilot Study.

    Lenoir, Augustin / Perrin, Bertrand R M / Lepage, Olivier M

    Veterinary medicine international

    2021  Volume 2021, Page(s) 5545758

    Abstract: Resection and anastomosis of small intestine during colic can lead to adhesions and recurrent colic. Several methods are available to reduce the rate of adhesions in the postoperative period, such as the use of serosal barriers. Surgical glues form a ... ...

    Abstract Resection and anastomosis of small intestine during colic can lead to adhesions and recurrent colic. Several methods are available to reduce the rate of adhesions in the postoperative period, such as the use of serosal barriers. Surgical glues form a smooth surface, are fast to apply, and could reduce surgery time when performing anastomosis. A recently developed UV-polymerizable methacrylate adhesive (UV-PMA) is designed to anchor into the biological tissues' top surface offering sealant and a smooth cover over the anastomosis site. This adhesive was used ex vivo on fifteen samples of equine jejunum as the second layer of a two-layer anastomosis (1L-UV-PMA group) and compared to a two-layer anastomosis (simple continuous pattern covered with a Cushing pattern; 2L-CT group), in terms of feasibility, bursting strength pressure (BSP), luminal diameter reduction (LDR), and time of construction. Data were analysed using a paired
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-04-04
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2536385-2
    ISSN 2042-0048 ; 2090-8113
    ISSN (online) 2042-0048
    ISSN 2090-8113
    DOI 10.1155/2021/5545758
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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