Academic literature on the topic 'Native medicinal species'

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Journal articles on the topic "Native medicinal species"

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Silva, Taline Cristina da, Josilene Marinho da Silva, and Marcelo Alves Ramos. "What Factors Guide the Selection of Medicinal Plants in a Local Pharmacopoeia? A Case Study in a Rural Community from a Historically Transformed Atlantic Forest Landscape." Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2018 (2018): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/2519212.

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The criteria that local people use for selecting medicinal plants have been a recurrent topic in pharmacology and ethnobotany. Two of the current hypotheses regarding this phenomenon, ecological apparency and diversification, attempt to explain the inclusion of “apparent” and “non-apparent” and native and exotic taxa, respectively, in local pharmacopoeia. This study addresses the following questions: Do “apparent” and “non-apparent” medicinal plants have the same importance in local pharmacopoeia? Do “non-apparent” plants occupy more local categories of diseases than “apparent” plants? Do nati
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Suwara-Szmigielska, Sylwia. "Medicinal synanthropic flora of Łask." Acta Agrobotanica 57, no. 1-2 (2013): 309–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.5586/aa.2004.025.

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The article presents a characterization and concentration of medicinal synanthropic plants found in the area of Łask. The research on medicinal synanthropic flora in Łask were ran in 2001-2002. The method of cartogram was used in the research. The mentioned method is grounded on a mapping of all species in a grid of the same square fields. The medicinal flora of the researched area consists of 227 taxons. Hemicryptophytes (41,4%) and therophytes (23,8%) dominate the other life forms. Native species - apophyta (157 species - 69,2%) - predominate within Łask's medicinal synanthropic flora.
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Catarino, Silvia, Maria Cristina Duarte, Esperança Costa, Paula Garcia Carrero, and Maria M. Romeiras. "Conservation and sustainable use of the medicinal Leguminosae plants from Angola." PeerJ 7 (May 23, 2019): e6736. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6736.

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Leguminosae is an economically important family that contains a large number of medicinal plants, many of which are widely used in African traditional medicine. Angola holds a great socio-cultural diversity and is one of the richest floristic regions of the world, with over 900 native Leguminosae species. This study is the first to assess the medicinal uses of the legumes in Angola and provides new data to promote the conservation and the sustainable use of these unique resources. We document the ethnobotanical knowledge on Angola by reviewing the most important herbarium collections and liter
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Song, Ju Yeon, Jacqueline Naylor-Adelberg, Sarah A. White, David A. Mann, and Jeffrey Adelberg. "Establishing clones of Veratrum californicum, a native medicinal species, for micropropagation." In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant 50, no. 3 (2014): 337–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11627-014-9603-7.

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Gardner, Zoë E., Lorna Lueck, and Lyle E. Craker*. "Morphological Variation in Black Cohosh—A Threatened Medicinal Plant." HortScience 39, no. 4 (2004): 779A—779. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.39.4.779a.

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Black cohosh [Actaea racemosa L.; syn. Cimicifuga racemosa (L.) Nutt], a plant native to the eastern United States, is believed to have been used as a medicinal by Native Americans for thousands of years. Currently, the root of the species is popular as a herbal remedy for the relief of menopausal symptoms. Recent estimates suggest that over 90% of the black cohosh sold is collected from the wild, resulting in an unsustainable harvest of ≈9 million individual plants per year. This study investigated the morphological variation of the plant at the population and species levels to assist plant b
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Mousavi, Seyed Abdollah, Li Li, Gehong Wei, Leena Räsänen, and Kristina Lindström. "Evolution and taxonomy of native mesorhizobia nodulating medicinal Glycyrrhiza species in China." Systematic and Applied Microbiology 39, no. 4 (2016): 260–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.syapm.2016.03.009.

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Kholina, Alla B., and Nina M. Voronkova. "Seed Cryopreservation of Some Medicinal Legumes." Journal of Botany 2012 (January 19, 2012): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/186891.

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Seed survival after storage in liquid nitrogen (–196°C) was examined in 12 wild medicinal legume species occurred Far East of Russia. Dry seeds of all species survived cryostorage without loss of viability. Initial germinability varied from 3 to 85%. The stimulatory effect of cryogenic temperature on germination, with or without subsequent chemical scarification, was observed in all species studied with deep physical dormancy or heterogeneous levels of hardseededness. Frozen seeds demonstrated higher germination percentages (the percentage of germinated seeds) and germination rates (time for f
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Joshi, Ekta B., BK Jain, Pankaj N. Joshi, and Hiren B. Soni. "Prevalence Of Traditional Medications Through Native Floral Elements Among Tribal Communities Of Kachchh Arid Ecosystem, Gujarat, India." International Journal of Environment 2, no. 1 (2013): 184–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/ije.v2i1.9221.

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This communication deals with the documentation of 38 medicinal plant species used for indigenous medications by local villagers such as pastoralists (Maldharis) and farmers of Tapkeshwari Hill Range (THR), Bhuj Taluka, Kachchh District, Gujarat, India. Traditional knowledge on medicinally important plant species has been recorded from tribal communities through semi-questionnaire survey using an open-ended questionnaire datasheets. The response from the people interviewed clearly indicated that most of the villagers were fully or partially dependent on the forest produce for their primary hea
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Zeb, Mehreen, and Chow H. Lee. "Medicinal Properties and Bioactive Compounds from Wild Mushrooms Native to North America." Molecules 26, no. 2 (2021): 251. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26020251.

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Mushrooms, the fruiting bodies of fungi, are known for a long time in different cultures around the world to possess medicinal properties and are used to treat various human diseases. Mushrooms that are parts of traditional medicine in Asia had been extensively studied and this has led to identification of their bioactive ingredients. North America, while home to one of the world’s largest and diverse ecological systems, has not subjected its natural resources especially its diverse array of mushroom species for bioprospecting purposes: Are mushrooms native to North America a good source for d
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Jamil, Tehseena, Yamin Bibi, and Kulsoom Zahara. "An Insight into Endangered Himalayan Paeony (Paeonia emodi royle): Ethnobotany, Phytochemistry and Pharmacology." Journal of Plant and Environment 2, no. 1 (2020): 25–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.33687/jpe.002.01.3477.

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Paeonia emodi Royle is an endangered herb native to Himalayan region with diverse traditional therapeutic uses. It is categorized as critically endangered plant species. Traditionally plant parts are used for nervous diseases, uterine diseases, dysentery, colic, backache, hypertension, and piles. The medicinal activity is the result of presence of various important phytochemicals triterpenes, monoterpenes, phenolics, lipooxygenases, Nortriprenoids, steroids and aldehydes. P. emodi has many biological activities including antimicrobial, antifungal, anti-toxicity, and spasmolytic activity. Due t
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Native medicinal species"

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Santos, Suzivany Almeida dos. "Conserva??o in vitro DE Hyptis ramosa Pohl ex Benth. (LAMIACEAE)." Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana, 2017. http://tede2.uefs.br:8080/handle/tede/710.

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Submitted by Ricardo Cedraz Duque Moliterno (ricardo.moliterno@uefs.br) on 2018-09-17T22:21:01Z No. of bitstreams: 1 SUZIVANY-Disserta??o final_P?s defesa pronta.pdf: 1092823 bytes, checksum: d04950266649fc7c286bacbc00d0e7ed (MD5)<br>Made available in DSpace on 2018-09-17T22:21:01Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 SUZIVANY-Disserta??o final_P?s defesa pronta.pdf: 1092823 bytes, checksum: d04950266649fc7c286bacbc00d0e7ed (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017-09-29<br>Coordena??o de Aperfei?oamento de Pessoal de N?vel Superior - CAPES<br>The genus Hyptis is composed of about 400 species distributed thro
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Wickens, Kristen M. "A search for biologically active compounds in Acacia (Mimosaceae) species." Curtin University of Technology, Department of Environmental Biology, 2003. http://espace.library.curtin.edu.au:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=15212.

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Indigenous Australians were also known to use plants for medicinal purposes. For thousands of years, Indigenous Australians have used native plants as a source of medicinal agents. Some tribes living in Central Australia still, to this day, prefer to use traditional medicines in favour of the more common and readily available western medicines. A number of plant species endemic to Australia are listed in various Aboriginal pharmacopoeias, with approximately one-third of those species belonging to two genera, Acacia and Eremophila. Of the 1100 recognised species of Acacia, approximately 900 occ
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Lima, Illyane Sofia Martins. "Medicinal and aromatic plants of Cape Verde: characterization of volatile metabolites of endemic and native species." Master's thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10316/25941.

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As plantas têm sido usadas como remédios pelo homem desde há milhares de anos e várias culturas incluem um amplo conhecimento sobre suas virtudes medicinais. Práticas tradicionais, apoiadas por conhecimentos empíricos, crenças e procedimentos, desempenham um papel importante, primeiramente nos cuidados de saúde das populações e, secundariamente, como evidências etnofarmacológicas disponíveis para o desenvolvimento de fármacos. As plantas aromáticas são associadas a muitas aplicações biológicas e médicas. Elas biossintetizam uma grande variedade de metabolitos secundários voláteis que de
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Books on the topic "Native medicinal species"

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1937-, Alcosser Murray, ed. Fossils: The evolution and extinction of species. Princeton University Press, 1996.

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Eldredge, Niles. Fossils: The evolution and extinction of species. H.N. Abrams, 1991.

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Fossils: The evolution and extinction of species. Aurum, 1991.

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Watson, David M. Mistletoes of Southern Australia. CSIRO Publishing, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643100831.

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Mistletoes are an enigmatic group of plants. Lacking roots and depending on other plants for their livelihood, they have inspired a range of beliefs throughout the world. Some people regard them as mystical plants endowed with magical properties, others as destructive weeds that devalue native habitats, and still others as beautiful native plants that support wildlife. &#x0D; This book represents the first thorough treatment of mistletoes in Australia. It summarises their evolutionary origin and global distribution, highlighting diversity patterns in Australasia, and describes the ecology and
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Eldredge, Niles. Fossils: The Evolution and Extinction of Species. Harry N Abrams, 1991.

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Balboni, Michael J., and Tracy A. Balboni. The Secular–Sacred Divide in Medicine. Edited by Michael J. Balboni and Tracy A. Balboni. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199325764.003.0007.

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This chapter argues, in addition to the plausibility structures described in Chapter 6, that modern consciousness comprises a series of related bifurcations of life and that medicine is a social institution that is informed by understandings of human nature, human knowledge, and social structures that fall on the opposite side of the wall from religion. Modern Western societies advance this dualism to such an extent that there appears to be no unity or interconnection between “opposite” spheres, divided between immanence and transcendence. This consciousness leads to social structures that div
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Gerber, David A. Disabled Veterans and the Wounds of War. Edited by Michael Rembis, Catherine Kudlick, and Kim E. Nielsen. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190234959.013.28.

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War is an abiding cause of death, disability, and disease. Disabled and chronically ill veterans of military conflict, as well as civilian victims of wars, have been neglected, both in popular memories and in academic research. But as long as people find disabled veterans convenient symbols of patriotism and sacrifice, they will continue to be a special project of the state, with a unique status separate from nondisabled and disabled civilians. Though there is still no synthesis of the history of disabled veterans, the outlines of one have been taking shape, emphasizing (1) the evolving nature
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Zack, Naomi, ed. The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Race. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190236953.001.0001.

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The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Race provides up-to-date explanation and analyses by leading scholars of contemporary issues in philosophy of race and African American philosophy. Ideas about race held by Locke, Hume, Kant, Hegel, and Nietzsche are supplemented by suppressed thought from the African diaspora, early twentieth-century African American perspectives, and Native American, Asian American, and Latin American views. Philosophical analysis is brought to bear on the status of racial divisions as human categories in the biological sciences, as well as within the architectonic of co
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Book chapters on the topic "Native medicinal species"

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Soria, Nelida. "The Disappearance and Substitution of Native Medicinal Species." In Wild Plants. CRC Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003020134-3.

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Zilkah, Shmuel, and Eliezer E. Goldschdmidt. "Myrtle (Myrtus communis L.) – A Native Mediterranean and Cultured Crop Species." In Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of the World. Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9276-9_14.

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Das, Piyali. "Designing a Framework of Ethnomedicinal Plant Knowledge Integration Using OSS." In Advances in Library and Information Science. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-9825-1.ch022.

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Indigenous knowledge refers to the knowledge, innovations, and practices of indigenous communities. Ethnic groups are repository knowledge of herbal medicine. Many indigenous people use several plants for medicinal preparations, and these medicines are known as ethnomedicine. It has developed from experience gained over centuries. Species of ethnomedicinal plants are threatened in most of nations due to overexploitation, habitat loss, destructive harvesting techniques, unsustainable trade, and deforestation. Documented indigenous knowledge on ethnomedicine forms part of the documentary heritage of the nation. The chapter will provide a framework for design an information retrieval system for ethnomedicine or knowledge on medicinal plants that are used to manage human ailments. The framework will be prepared, established on the open source software (OSS), and is appropriate not only for documentation but also beneficial for retrieving domain-specific knowledge. The model provides a framework for resource integration digitally using Greenstone Digital Library (GSDL) software.
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Das, Piyali. "Designing a Framework of Ethnomedicinal Plant Knowledge Integration Using OSS." In Research Anthology on Usage and Development of Open Source Software. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-9158-1.ch026.

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Indigenous knowledge refers to the knowledge, innovations, and practices of indigenous communities. Ethnic groups are repository knowledge of herbal medicine. Many indigenous people use several plants for medicinal preparations, and these medicines are known as ethnomedicine. It has developed from experience gained over centuries. Species of ethnomedicinal plants are threatened in most of nations due to overexploitation, habitat loss, destructive harvesting techniques, unsustainable trade, and deforestation. Documented indigenous knowledge on ethnomedicine forms part of the documentary heritage of the nation. The chapter will provide a framework for design an information retrieval system for ethnomedicine or knowledge on medicinal plants that are used to manage human ailments. The framework will be prepared, established on the open source software (OSS), and is appropriate not only for documentation but also beneficial for retrieving domain-specific knowledge. The model provides a framework for resource integration digitally using Greenstone Digital Library (GSDL) software.
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Simon, Chantal, Hazel Everitt, Françoise van Dorp, and Matt Burkes. "Medicines and prescribing." In Oxford Handbook of General Practice. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199671038.003.0006.

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NHS prescriptions Writing prescriptions Cost-effective prescribing Medicines management and concordance Repeat prescribing Adverse drug reactions Licensing Controlled drugs Prescribing for special groups Complementary medicine ‘A doctor is a man who writes prescriptions till the patient either dies or is cured by nature’ John Taylor (1694–1761)...
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Fatih, Brahmi, Khodir Madani, Mohamed Chibane, and Pierre Duez. "Chemical Composition and Biological Activities of Mentha Species." In Aromatic and Medicinal Plants - Back to Nature. InTech, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/67291.

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Takeara, Renata, Regiane Gonçalves, Vanessa Farias dos Santos Ayres, and Anderson Cavalcante Guimarães. "Biological Properties of Essential Oils from the Piper Species of Brazil: A Review." In Aromatic and Medicinal Plants - Back to Nature. InTech, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/66508.

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Eryılmaz Pehlivan, Fadime. "Bitter Melon: A Multifunctional Medicinal Plant with Powerful Bioactive Compounds." In Functional Foods [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.98812.

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Nature is full of poisons as well as life-saving entities. Extracts of natural products in medicinal plants have been used for thousands of years in traditional medicine throughout the World. Bitter melon (Momordica charantia) is a member of Cucurbitaceae family, widely distributed in tropical regions of the World, that has been used in folk medicine for the treatment of diabetes mellitus, and its fruit has been used as a vegetable for thousands of years. It contains phytochemicals, flavonoids, triterpenes, saponins, ascorbic acid, steroids, proteins, and polysaccharides. This plant is a traditional herbal medicine, possesses various biological, medicinal activities and pharmacological functions, namely antidiabetic, anthelmintic, contraceptive, antimalarial, laxative, antihyperglycemic, antimutagenic, antiulcer, antilipolytic, antifertility, hepatoprotective, anticancer, antibacterial, antiviral, antitumor, immunomodulation, antioxidant, antidiabetic, and anti-inflammatory activities of M. charantia have been reported. Its fruit has a special bitter taste, parts of M. charantia, such as fruits, vines, leaves and even roots have been used as folk medicine for the remedy of diseases like toothache, diarrhea, and diabetes. It is also used for the treatment of eczema, gout, jaundice, pneumonia, psoriasis, and rheumatism. These beneficial effects are attributed to the various bioactive components of M. charantia, which are important sources of phytoconstituents used to treat various diseases since ancient times. This chapter reviews various aspects of the results of investigations involving M. charantia in the recent years, providing a comprehensive overview of the phytochemical application of M. charantia to attract more attention to their biological activities for better utilization of M. charantia; focusing on the review of benefits that bitter melon offers in terms of its potential as a source of bioactive compounds and its role in the control of different diseases.
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Fotsing Yannick Stéphane, Fongang, Bankeu Kezetas Jean Jules, Gaber El-Saber Batiha, Iftikhar Ali, and Lenta Ndjakou Bruno. "Extraction of Bioactive Compounds from Medicinal Plants and Herbs." In Pharmacognosy - Medicinal Plants [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.98602.

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Human beings have relied on herbs and medicinal plants as sources of food and remedy from time immemorial. Bioactive compounds from plants are currently the subject of much research interest, but their extraction as part of phytochemical and/or biological investigations present specific challenges. Herbalists or scientists have developed many protocols of extraction of bioactive ingredients to ensure the effectiveness and the efficacy of crude drugs that were used to get relief from sickness. With the advent of new leads from plants such as morphine, quinine, taxol, artemisinin, and alkaloids from Voacanga species, a lot of attention is paid to the mode of extraction of active phytochemicals to limit the cost linked to the synthesis and isolation. Thus, the extraction of active compounds from plants needs appropriate extraction methods and techniques that provide bioactive ingredients-rich extracts and fractions. The extraction procedures, therefore, play a critical role in the yield, the nature of phytochemical content, etc. This chapter aims to present, describe, and compare extraction procedures of bioactive compounds from herbs and medicinal plants.
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Haug, Louise Wilkins. "Evolution, Genomics, and the New Genetic Technologies." In Integrating Evolutionary Biology into Medical Education. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198814153.003.0013.

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“Genomics” encompasses gene variations, gene-gene interactions, control of DNA sequence activation and the expanding understanding of the process from gene to protein to individual. This critical pathway from gene, to protein, to individual is complex but remarkably unaltered across species. New genomic technologies can interrogate innumerable sites for possible alteration or targeting for interventions. In addition, central to integrating the current and future genomics into medical care is an interweaving of evolution, especially evolutionary medicine. The core principle of evolution is survival of the fittest—survival to reproduction and transference of genes. Continued education around the concepts of mechanistic (proximate) cause and ultimate cause (the evolutionary nature) will inform medical care. Understanding genomics and evolution is central to thoughtful ‘precision medicine’ with the crafting of medical care to individual gene alterations. An inclusive approach is needed among medical education.
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Conference papers on the topic "Native medicinal species"

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Lyashenko, A. A., Ya P. Melihov, and I. A. Martin. "SWIMMING AS A TYPE OF PREVENTION OF OSTEOCHONDROSIS." In Х Всероссийская научно-практическая конференция. Nizhnevartovsk State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36906/fks-2020/33.

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This article discusses in detail the problem of increasing the incidence of osteochondrosis among all age groups of the country's population. The purpose of the analysis is to generalize and systematize knowledge on the issue of disease prevention using moderate physical activity in the pool. The authors conclude that this type of physical activity contributes to many health processes. Special attention is paid to the swimming styles necessary for the prevention of osteochondrosis. The article is of an interdisciplinary nature since its topic is at the intersection of medicine and physical cul
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Sudama, Hiroki, Atsushi Ogawa, Kei Saito, Wataru Ando, Norimasa Nakamura, and Hiromichi Fujie. "Effect of Shear Stress on Extracellular Matrix Production of Synovium-Derived Cells." In ASME 2009 Summer Bioengineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/sbc2009-206331.

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It is well known that various fibrous tissue such as tendons and ligaments functionally adapt to dynamic and static loads. Although a variety of biomechanical studies have been done to deterimine the mechanism of remodeling in fibrous tissues, it was difficult to obtain detailed information because of complicated condstitution of the tissues. We have developed a stem cell-based self-assembled tissue (scSAT) [1] for tissue engineering. Since the scSAT is consisted of synovium-derived mesenchyaml stem cells and their native extracellular matrix, it is a good experimental model to determine the p
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Erdman, Vera Viktorovna, Timur Ruslanovich Nasibullin, Ilsiar Avkhatovna Tuktarova, et al. "POLYMORPHISM OF ANTIOXIDANT DEFENSE GENES AND LIFESPAN." In International conference New technologies in medicine, biology, pharmacology and ecology (NT +M&Ec ' 2020). Institute of information technology, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47501/978-5-6044060-0-7.07.

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In the ethnic group of Russians, residents of the Republic of Bashkortostan, age-dependent changes in the&#x0D; alleles and genotypes frequencies in SOD1, SOD2, PON1, PON2, NQO1, GPX1 genes SNVs were found. Enzymes, encoded by these genes, are involved in the metabolism of reactive oxygen species of the first and second stages, as well as toxic compounds of endogenous and exogenous nature.
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Doughty, Timothy, Jordan Heintz, and Melissa Ishii. "Reducing Parkinsonian Hand Tremor With a Novel Dynamic Eating Utensil." In ASME 2013 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2013-65282.

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The work presented here details the modeling, fabrication, testing, and analysis of a dynamic eating utensil designed to reduce hand tremors in subjects with Parkinson’s disease. Most of the current work addressing this problem has been invasive, using medicine or electrical brain stimulation for example. Here, an analysis is presented on the nature of the tremor. This is then used to develop a multi degree-of-freedom analytic model for the forearm/wrist/utensil system. Experiments were performed to identify model form and parameters and theory is presented which allowed for optimized system d
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Bandyopadhyay, Sumahan, та Doyel Chatterjee. "A Salvage Linguistic Anthropological Study of the Endangered Māṅgtā Language of West Bengal, India". У GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2019. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2019.15-2.

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The present paper is a salvage Linguistic Anthropology, in which attempt has been made to document a nearly-extinct language known as māṅgtā bhāsā, and to suggest appropriate measures for saving it from complete extinction. The word māṅgtā is said to have been derived from māṅā, which means ‘to ask for’ or ‘to beg’. The language is spoken by a few groups of the Bedia, which is a Scheduled Tribe (ST) in India with a population of 88,772 as per Census of India, 2011(Risley [1891]1981; Bandyopadhyay 2012, 2016, 2017). Bedia is a generic name for a number of vagrant gypsy like groups which Risley
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Iles, Tinen L., Timothy G. Laske, David L. Garshelis, et al. "Medtronic Reveal LINQ™ Devices Provide Better Understanding of Hibernation Physiology in the American Black Bear (Ursus Americanus)." In 2017 Design of Medical Devices Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/dmd2017-3498.

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The American black bear (Ursus americanus) has been called a metabolic marvel6. In northern Minnesota, where we have conducted long-term physiological and ecological studies of this species, bears may remain in their winter dens for 6 months or more without eating, drinking, urinating or defecating and yet lose very little muscle mass2. We also found that hibernating black bears elicit asystolic events of over 30 seconds and experience an exaggerated respiratory sinus arrhythmia2. In this previous work we employed Medtronic Reveal® XT devices that required us to visit the den and temporarily e
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