Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:R. Goldstein)
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1Jinsmaa, Y., Sharabi, Y., Sullivan, P., Isonaka, R., Goldstein, D. S.
The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Published 2018Staff ViewPublication Date: 2018-06-05Publisher: The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental TherapeuticsPrint ISSN: 0022-3565Electronic ISSN: 1521-0103Topics: MedicinePublished by: -
2H. Nilsson ; G. Stenberg Wieser ; E. Behar ; C. S. Wedlund ; H. Gunell ; M. Yamauchi ; R. Lundin ; S. Barabash ; M. Wieser ; C. Carr ; E. Cupido ; J. L. Burch ; A. Fedorov ; J. A. Sauvaud ; H. Koskinen ; E. Kallio ; J. P. Lebreton ; A. Eriksson ; N. Edberg ; R. Goldstein ; P. Henri ; C. Koenders ; P. Mokashi ; Z. Nemeth ; I. Richter ; K. Szego ; M. Volwerk ; C. Vallat ; M. Rubin
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2015Staff ViewPublication Date: 2015-01-24Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsPublished by: -
3Mark R. Goldstein, Luca Mascitelli
The American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
Published 2018Staff ViewPublication Date: 2018-10-16Publisher: The American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)Print ISSN: 0008-5472Electronic ISSN: 1538-7445Topics: MedicinePublished by: -
4Staff View
ISSN: 1365-2524Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: MedicineNotes: The traditional dispensing role of the community pharmacist is increasingly being questioned and greater emphasis is being placed on the provision of advice. Introduction of the NHS Community Care Act provides an opportunity to consider the potential role of community pharmacists in care management and in carrying out assessment of individual need. This paper describes the introduction of Community Care training for community pharmacists in Derbyshire and the results of a study to evaluate assessment and referrals that the community pharmacists routinely carried out. Fourteen pharmacists who participated in the study recorded assessments that they carried out over a 10-week period between January and April 1994. A total of 858 assessments were self-reported by the community pharmacists, of which 57% resulted from enquiries relating to physical symptoms, 27% relating to prescription medication and 8% from social problems. A further 7% arose from a combination of these categories. Nearly one third of all assessments were made at the request of a carer. Health care professionals had initiated 7% of the enquiries, with a greater proportion of these associated with prescription medication (46%) and social care (29%) compared with those initiated by patients (20% prescription medication, 6% social care) or carers (26% prescription medication, 6% social care). If a pharmacist intervened to initiate an enquiry, a greater proportion of assessments led to referral (33%) compared with 14–21% for other types of enquirer. This paper discusses the possibility of providing greater access to care-management, care planning and monitoring through making this process more widely available from community pharmacies on the high-street.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
5Staff View
ISSN: 1365-2427Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: BiologyNotes: The effects of sublethal temperatures on feeding rates and phosphorus dynamics of a freshwater snail, Goniobasis clavaeformis Lea, were determined and feeding rates were measured at four temperatures. The food source was aufwuchs labelled with radioactive phosphorus. A model was developed to elucidate the results of this type of study. Food ingestion rate increased with increasing temperature up to 14°C and then decreased at temperatures above 14°C. The elimination rate of absorbed phosphorus increased with increasing temperature throughout the entire range of experimental temperatures, 10-19.3°C. Mean retention times of absorbed phosphorus i n Goniobasis were estimated to be 34, 24, 10, and 6 days at 10, 13.8, 15, and 193°C, respectively. Mean retention time of unabsorbed 32P in the gut of this species as a function of temperature followed the same temperature relationship as that of ingestion rate.The absorption efficiency of phosphorus was estimated to be constant at about 39% for ail experimental temperatures, although the data suggest that the absorption ePRciency may have been related inversely to the rate of gut clearance or directly to the residence time of food in the gut. The equilibrium body load of phosphorus at each experimental temperature was estimated based on concentrations of stable phosphorus in the food source and the kinetics of 32P in Goniobasis. The equilibrium body burden of phosphorus in Goniobasis increased with increasing temperatures up to a maximum at 11–12°C and then decreased at temperatures above 12°C.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
6Staff View
ISSN: 1089-7666Source: AIP Digital ArchiveTopics: PhysicsNotes: A computer-controlled data acquisition system has been designed and constructed to automate measurement of turbulent velocity correlations in a two-dimensional turbulent wall jet. Measurements are made with a single component laser Doppler velocimeter system in a flow of air on a flat plate with stagnant surroundings. Measurements of a number of turbulence parameters have been completed and compared with existing hot-wire data. The measurements are made at two downstream locations at a Reynolds number, based on slot width, of 14 000. Earlier hot-wire data for a two-dimensional turbulent wall jet in stagnant surroundings show much scatter in the outer region where local turbulence intensities range from 40% to 70%. The laser Doppler velocimeter gives repeatable values and eliminates the bias in hot-wire measurements due to reversing flow and errors in corrections for high turbulence effects. The measured turbulent normal stresses are somewhat higher than those previously reported throughout the flow field. The turbulent shear stress is in good agreement with previous hot-wire results near the wall. Hot wires are shown to indicate low values of the Reynolds stress in the turbulent outer regions where they are affected by strong flow reversals. The new measurements agree well with predictions based on momentum integral methods.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
7Goldstein, R. ; Grosser, J. ; Hoffmann, O. ; Schumann, V. ; Wößner, D.
College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Published 2001Staff ViewISSN: 1089-7690Source: AIP Digital ArchiveTopics: PhysicsChemistry and PharmacologyNotes: The electronic structure of the NaN2 and NaC2H2 collision pairs is probed by optical excitation. Based on polarization experiments, we measure the alignment tensor of the electronic transition dipole moments. We compare the experimental data with the results of a quantum chemical calculation. The different geometric properties of the electronic wave functions of the two collision pairs are directly visible in the experimental data. © 2001 American Institute of Physics.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
8Staff View
ISSN: 0147-619XSource: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: BiologyType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
9Staff View
ISSN: 1460-2695Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: Abstract— We consider the slow growth of normal tension cracks as quasi-brittle behaviour under hydrogen embrittlement conditions. Experiments show that the cracking resistance of a material in such cases is not a constant of the material, but is characterized by some function that relates the rate of crack growth to the stress intensity factor. We propose a numerical method for the calculation of opening mode crack growth when the kinetics are controlled by the gas diffusion into the material. The problems under consideration model the fracture phenomena inherent to structures (e.g. pressure vessels, pipelines) that operate in an aggressive medium and in particular a hydrogen environment.In such problems it is necessary to calculate the pressure variation inside a crack as a result of gas diffusion and crack growth under the action of this pressure. Hence it is necessary to solve problems of diffusion theory and elasticity theory for a cracked medium together with some additional conditions that provide the link between these two fundamental problems.We study the case of an infinite medium containing a crack which occupies a plane domain of arbitrary shape. To avoid difficulties related to the three-dimensionality of the problems, we reduce them to two-dimensional integro-differential equations for the crack domain. The integro-differential equation of the elasticity problem of the crack is solved on the basis of the Boundary Element Method (BEM). The crack kinetics are calculated using a scheme previously introduced by one of the authors and then the BEM is used to solve the integral equation for the diffusion-into-the-crack problem similar to the analogous problem of filtration of the fluid into a crack.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
10GOLDSTEIN, R. V. ; ZHITNIKOV, YU. V. ; KADOCHNIKOV, I. V.
PO Box 1354, 9600 Garsington Road , Oxford OX4 2XG , UK . : Blackwell Science Ltd
Published 2003Staff ViewISSN: 1460-2695Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsNotes: This paper is devoted to the modelling and analysis of the problem of the safety and residual lifetime of pressurized components (e.g. pressure vessels, apparatus, pipelines) with zones of local corrosion damage. Corrosion damage is the most common form of structural material degradation in service conditions, in particular, in the chemical and gas, and oil industries. Attention is paid to nonstationary regimes of the component operation, e.g., start-stop regimes. It is shown that the critical parameters calculated taking into account the nonstationary loading can be lower compared with ones determined for the stationary regimes, e.g., on the basis of the ASME Code B31G.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
11Alexandrov, S. E. ; Goldstein, R. V. ; Tchikanova, N. N.
Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
Published 1999Staff ViewISSN: 1460-2695Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision MechanicsType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
12Staff View
ISSN: 0005-2760Keywords: Bile salt ; Histamine ; Lipase ; Pentagastrin ; Positional specificitySource: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicinePhysicsType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
13Gladstone, G. R. ; Lewis, W. S. ; Goldstein, R. ; McComas, D. J. ; Riley, P. ; Walker, R. J. ; Robertson, P. ; Desai, S. ; Clarke, J. T. ; Young, D. T. ; Waite, J. H.
[s.l.] : Macmillian Magazines Ltd.
Published 2001Staff ViewISSN: 1476-4687Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsNotes: [Auszug] Jupiter's aurora is the most powerful in the Solar System. It is powered largely by energy extracted from planetary rotation, although there seems also to be a contribution from the solar wind. This contrasts with Earth's aurora, which is generated through the interaction of the solar wind with ...Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
14Staff View
ISSN: 0165-0327Keywords: Bariatric ; Family history ; Genetics ; Mental illness ; Morbid obesitySource: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: MedicinePsychologyType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
15Staff View
ISSN: 0165-0327Keywords: Comorbidity ; Family history ; Genetics ; Major depression ; Panic disorder ; PhenomenologySource: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: MedicinePsychologyType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
16Faris, B. ; Moscaritolo, R. ; Levine, A. ; Snider, R. ; Goldstein, R. ; Franzblau, C.
Amsterdam : ElsevierStaff ViewISSN: 0005-2795Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: BiologyType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
17Staff View
ISSN: 0022-0965Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: PsychologyType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
18Dollfus, A. ; Chapman, C.R. ; Davies, M.E. ; Gingerich, O. ; Goldstein, R. ; Guest, J. ; Morrison, D. ; Smith, B.A.
Amsterdam : ElsevierStaff ViewISSN: 0019-1035Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: PhysicsType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
19Staff View
ISSN: 0022-5320Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: BiologyType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
20Staff View
ISSN: 0027-5107Keywords: (Chinese hamster ovary cells) ; Alkylating agents, monofunctional ; Cell Killing ; Methyl methanesulphonate ; N-Ethyl-N-nitrosourea ; N-Methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine ; N-Methyl-N-nitrosoureaSource: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002Topics: BiologyMedicineType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: