23 results on '"A. E. Laing"'
Search Results
2. Quality of life in Hidradenitis Suppurativa (Acne Inversa): A scoping review
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Amrit P. Kaur, Mary E. Laing, Laoise Griffin, and Peter J. Carr
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Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
Abstract Background Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS) is a chronic, relapsing, inflammatory skin condition which is physically, psychologically and socially disabling and often affects a patient's quality of life (QOL). There are numerous QOL tools used in dermatology. However, assessment of QOL in patients with HS is difficult due to the inability of generic QOL tools to specifically capture QOL in patients with HS. Numerous HS‐specific QOL tools have been developed in recent years. It is important to identify evidence on full psychometric evaluation of these tools. Objectives There has been a gradual increase in the use of generic and disease‐specific QOL tools in the last few decades. The aim of this scoping review (SR) is to evaluate the most widely used generic QOL tools and HS‐specific QOL tools to identify the psychometric evaluation of such tools. Methods Design: An SR guided by Joanna Briggs Institute manual and Arskey O’Malley framework guidelines. Data extraction included the studies available on full psychometric evaluation of the most widely used dermatology generic QOL tools in HS and HS‐specific QOL tools. Results Ten papers were included in the review, eight papers demonstrated HS‐specific QOL assessment tools. The psychometric properties of these tools were underpinned by reliability, validity and sensitivity measurement. Six disease‐specific tools were identified in this SR. However, they all lack full psychometric evaluation. Conclusion This review indicates that an extensive research in the field of QOL tools for HS is much needed. It is crucial to develop user‐friendly and validate disease‐specific tools to measure the real impact of disease on patients QOL. QOL instruments can evaluate the impact on life of an HS patient, thus helping improve intervention and management of disease. There is a necessity for more research into existing HS‐specific QOL tools and they should be widely tested and fully validated.
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- 2023
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3. Genetic polymorphism in Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase chloride transport protein 6 (MTHFR CLCN6) gene is associated with keratinocyte skin cancer in a cohort of renal transplant recipients
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L. Griffin, L. Ho, R. J. Akhurst, S. T. Arron, J. M. E. Boggs, P. Conlon, P. O’Kelly, A. E. Toland, E. H. Epstein, A. Balmain, B. C. Bastian, F. J. Moloney, G. M. Murphy, and M. E. Laing
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Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
Abstract Background Renal transplant recipients (RTRs) are at increased risk of keratinocyte cancer (KC), especially cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC). Previous studies identified a genetic variant of the Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (MTHFR) gene, C677T, which conferred a risk for diagnosis of cSCC in Irish RTRs. Objective We sought to find further genetic variation in MTHFR and overlap genes that may be associated with a diagnosis of KC in RTRs. Methods Genotyping of a combined RTR population (n = 821) from two centres, Ireland (n = 546) and the USA (n = 275), was performed. This included 290 RTRs with KC and 444 without. Eleven single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the MTHFR gene and seven in the overlap gene MTHFR Chloride transport protein 6 (CLCN6) were evaluated and association explored by time to event analysis (from transplant to first KC) using Cox proportional hazards model. Results Polymorphism at MTHFR CLCN6 (rs9651118) was significantly associated with KC in RTRs (HR 1.50, 95% CI 1.17–1.91, p
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- 2022
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4. Skin cancer diagnosis in renal transplant recipients during the Covid‐19 pandemic
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E. Keeling, J. Hynes, E. K. Pender, L. R. Griffin, and M. E. Laing
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Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Published
- 2022
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5. Reporting and conducting patient journey mapping research in healthcare: A scoping review
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Ellen L. Davies, Lemma N. Bulto, Alison Walsh, Danielle Pollock, Vikki M. Langton, Robert E. Laing, Amy Graham, Melissa Arnold‐Chamney, and Janet Kelly
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General Nursing - Abstract
To identify how patient journey mapping is being undertaken and reported.A scoping review of the literature was undertaken using JBI guidance.Databases were searched in July 2021 (16th-21st), including Ovid's Medline, Embase, Emcare and PsycINFO; Scopus; Web of Science Core Collection, the Directory of Open Access Journals; Informit and; ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global.Eligible articles included peer-reviewed literature documenting journey mapping methodologies and studies conducted in healthcare services. Reviewers used Covidence to screen titles and abstracts of located sources, and to screen full-text articles. A table was used to extract data and synthesize results.Eighty-one articles were included. An acceleration of patient journey mapping research was observed, with 76.5% (n = 62) of articles published since 2015. Diverse mapping approaches were identified. Reporting of studies was inconsistent and largely non-adherent with relevant, established reporting guidelines.Patient journey mapping is a relatively novel approach for understanding patient experiences and is increasingly being adopted. There is variation in process details reported. Considerations for improving reporting standards are provided.Patient journey mapping is a rapidly growing approach for better understanding how people enter, experience and exit health services. This type of methodology has significant potential to inform new, patient centred models of care and facilitate clinicians, patients and health professionals to better understand gaps and strategies in health services. The synthesised results of this review alert researchers to options available for journey mapping research and provide preliminary guidance for elevating reporting quality.
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- 2022
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6. Immunonutrition in cancer surgery: a missed opportunity?
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A. Khan, E. Laing, A. Beaumont, S. Warrier, B. Riedel, and A. Heriot
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Surgery ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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7. Mothers’ work status and 17‐month‐olds’ productive vocabulary
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Catherine E. Laing and Elika Bergelson
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Vocabulary ,Productive Vocabulary ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Focus (linguistics) ,Language development ,Work status ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Literature examining the effects of mothers' work status on infant language development is mixed, with little focus on varying work-schedules and early vocabulary. We use naturalistic data to analyze the productive vocabulary of 44 17-month-olds in relation to mothers' work status (Full-time, Part-time, Stay-at-home) at 6 and 18 months. Infants who experienced a combination of care from mothers and other caretakers had larger productive vocabularies than infants in solely full-time maternal or solely other-caretaker care. Our results draw from naturalistic data to suggest that this care combination may be particularly beneficial for early lexical development.
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- 2019
8. Dung and nest surveys: estimating decay rates
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A. Amphlett, R. W. Burn, D. Lambie, S. E. Laing, and Stephen T. Buckland
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Estimation ,Survey methodology ,Ecology ,Habitat ,Nest ,Abundance (ecology) ,Statistics ,Covariate ,Forest management ,Wildlife ,Environmental science - Abstract
1. Wildlife managers often require estimates of abundance. Direct methods of estimation are often impractical, especially in closed-forest environments, so indirect methods such as dung or nest surveys are increasingly popular. 2. Dung and nest surveys typically have three elements: surveys to estimate abundance of the dung or nests; experiments to estimate the production (defecation or nest construction) rate; and experiments to estimate the decay or disappearance rate. The last of these is usually the most problematic, and was the subject of this study. 3. The design of experiments to allow robust estimation of mean time to decay was addressed. In most studies to date, dung or nests have been monitored until they disappear. Instead, we advocate that fresh dung or nests are located, with a single follow-up visit to establish whether the dung or nest is still present or has decayed. 4. Logistic regression was used to estimate probability of decay as a function of time, and possibly of other covariates. Mean time to decay was estimated from this function. 5. Synthesis and applications. Effective management of mammal populations usually requires reliable abundance estimates. The difficulty in estimating abundance of mammals in forest environments has increasingly led to the use of indirect survey methods, in which abundance of sign, usually dung (e.g. deer, antelope and elephants) or nests (e.g. apes), is estimated. Given estimated rates of sign production and decay, sign abundance estimates can be converted to estimates of animal abundance. Decay rates typically vary according to season, weather, habitat, diet and many other factors, making reliable estimation of mean time to decay of signs present at the time of the survey problematic. We emphasize the need for retrospective rather than prospective rates, propose a strategy for survey design, and provide analysis methods for estimating retrospective rates.
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- 2003
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9. Interactions between genetic and reproductive factors in breast cancer risk in a population-based sample of African-American families
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Lucile L. Adams-Campbell, George E. Bonney, Barry L. Gause, A. E. Laing, Florence Demenais, Valérie Chaudru, Robert L. DeWitty, John J. Lynch, Georgia M. Dunston, LaSalle D. Leffall, and R. Williams
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Adult ,Epidemiology ,Breast Neoplasms ,Biology ,Breast cancer ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Age of Onset ,Risk factor ,Gene–environment interaction ,Genetics (clinical) ,Aged ,Genes, Dominant ,Aged, 80 and over ,Menarche ,Likelihood Functions ,Incidence ,Reproduction ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Abortion, Spontaneous ,Black or African American ,Parity ,Logistic Models ,Genetic epidemiology ,Female ,Menopause ,Age of onset ,Risk assessment ,Demography - Abstract
Incidence of breast cancer (BC) varies among ethnic groups, with higher rates in white than in African-American women. Until now, most epidemiological and genetic studies have been carried out in white women. To investigate whether interactions between genetic and reproductive risk factors may explain part of the ethnic disparity in BC incidence, a genetic epidemiology study was conducted, between 1989 and 1994, at the Howard University Cancer Center (Washington, DC), which led to the recruitment of 245 African-American families. Segregation analysis of BC was performed by use of the class D regressive logistic model that allows for censored data to account for a variable age of onset of disease, as implemented in the REGRESS program. Segregation analysis of BC was consistent with a putative dominant gene effect (P < 0.000001) and residual sister-dependence (P < 0.0001). This putative gene was found to interact significantly with age at menarche (P = 0.048), and an interaction with a history of spontaneous abortions was suggested (P = 0.08). A late age at menarche increased BC risk in gene carriers but had a protective effect in non-gene carriers. A history of spontaneous abortions had a protective effect in gene carriers and increased BC risk in non-gene carriers. Our findings agree partially with a similar analysis of French families showing a significant gene x parity interaction and a suggestive gene x age at menarche interaction. Investigating gene x risk factor interactions in different populations may have important implications for further biological investigations and for BC risk assessment.
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- 2002
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10. FACTORS INFLUENCING DIATOM DISTRIBUTIONS IN CIRCUMPOLAR TREELINE LAKES OF NORTHERN RUSSIA
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John P. Smol and Tamsin E. Laing
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biology ,Ecology ,Plant Science ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Paleolimnology ,Tundra ,Fragilaria ,Diatom ,Arctic ,Benthic zone ,Canonical correspondence analysis ,Physical geography ,Surface water - Abstract
Diatom assemblages and limnological data were analyzed from 74 lakes spanning arctic treeline in three geographical regions of northern Russia: near the mouth of the Pechora River, on the Taimyr Peninsula, and near the mouth of the Lena River. Analysis of similarities indicated that diatom assemblages in tundra and forest lakes were significantly different from each other in all regions, with tundra lakes generally associated with higher abundances of small benthic Fragilaria Lyngbye taxa. Canonical correspondence analysis identified variables related to ion concentrations (e.g. Na+, dissolved inorganic carbon), lake depth, silica concentrations, and surface water temperatures as factors that explained significant amounts of variation in the diatom assemblages. Across treeline, the generally higher surface water temperatures of the forested lakes consistently accounted for a significant proportion of the diatom distribution patterns. Major ion concentrations also explained significant amounts of variation in the diatom assemblages across treeline for all three regions; however, regional trends were most likely influenced by local factors (i.e. ocean proximity or anthropogenic activities). The importance of climatic gradients across treeline (e.g. temperature) diatom distributions provides additional evidence that diatoms may be useful as paleoclimatic indicators. However, combination of the three calibration sets revealed that local water chemistry determinants (e.g. lithology, marine influence) overrode the influence of climatic gradients in explaining diatom distributions, suggesting that regional differences must be minimized for successful combination of geographically separate calibration sets.
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- 2000
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11. Production of exclusively male progeny by mated, honey-fedTrichogramma minutumRiley (Hym., Trichogrammatidae)
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J. A. Leatemia, J. E. Corrigan, and J. E. Laing
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Trichogramma minutum ,biology ,Host (biology) ,Offspring ,Ephestia kuehniella ,biology.organism_classification ,Sperm ,Animal science ,Trichogrammatidae ,Reproductive period ,Spermatheca ,Insect Science ,Botany ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,reproductive and urinary physiology - Abstract
Most mated, honey-fed, female Trichogramma minutum, provided with host eggs of Ephestia kuehniella from eclosion, were shown to produce broods of exclusively male offspring as they aged. Females produced an average of 218.5 ± 69.9 offspring during a reproductive period of > 20 days. Of these offspring, 96.7 ± 59.5 were males that were produced after the mother had ceased to produce female offspring. Females that had shifted to all-male production were capable of re-mating and resuming production of female progeny, indicating that either sperm depletion or loss of sperm viability played a role in the shift to all-male production. However, honey-fed, mated females that were held without access to hosts for up to 16 days at 25° C or 28 days at 16° C were able to produce female offspring when allowed to parasitize. This indicates that sperm would remain viable in the females' spermatheca for extended periods of time and that sperm depletion was, at least partially, the cause of the shift to all-male progeny production. Honey-fed females held without host eggs for up to 8 days at 25° C or 28 days at 16°C had reductions in their initial, 2-day offspring production of only 10% and 20%, respectively. This could allow for the build-up of large numbers of effective parasitoids for mass culture or field release.
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- 1995
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12. Linkage between the APOB gene and serum apoB levels in a large pedigree from the Bogalusa heart study
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C. DeMeester, Anh Diep, Christopher I. Amos, A. E. Laing, Gerald S. Berenson, Yu-Rong Xia, Robert C. Elston, Sathanur R. Srinivasan, and Aldons J. Lusis
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Linkage (software) ,Genetics ,Candidate gene ,Lipoprotein lipase ,Apolipoprotein B ,biology ,Epidemiology ,Haplotype ,Quantitative trait locus ,Genetic linkage ,biology.protein ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Hepatic lipase ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Maximum likelihood linkage analyses were performed to test for linkage between serum apoB levels and several candidate gene markers including apolipoprotein B, lipoprotein lipase, hepatic lipase, cholesterol ester transfer protein, and apolipoprotein AI in a large pedigree. Parameters of general Mendelian inheritance derived from maximum likelihood segregation analysis of the serum apoB levels were used in the linkage analysis. The highest two-point lod score between the quantitative trait and a marker defined by a single restriction digest was 1.86 at recombination fraction (theta) = 0. This was observed for linkage between serum apoB levels and the presence or absence of a PvuII digestion site in the apoB gene. Linkage between serum apoB levels and polymorphisms of the apoB gene defined by the two restriction digests EcoR1 and PvuII was supported by a lod score of 3.30, while inclusion of VNTR typings led to a lod score of 2.33. None of the other candidate genes gave positive evidence of linkage.
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- 1994
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13. A comparison of univariate and multivariate tests for genetic linkage
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Christopher I. Amos and A. E. Laing
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Linkage (software) ,Genetics ,Multivariate statistics ,Multivariate analysis ,Epidemiology ,Cholesterol ,Blood lipids ,Biology ,Major gene ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Genetic linkage ,LDL receptor ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
A variety of robust and model-dependent genetic linkage methods were applied to log transformed lipid levels from a large pedigree in which the LDL receptor defect has been shown to segregate by molecular biologic techniques. Applicationof the Haseman-Elston and avariance-components based test for linkage identified LDL and cholesterol as cosegregating with the marker C3, which is genetically linked to the LDL receptor defect. Consideration of lipid fractions as a multivariate response identified (0.723×cholesterol)-(0.55 1×triglycerides) as most strongly supporting evidence for linkage with C3. Subsequent segregation and linkage analyses provided support for an autosomal dominant major gene influencing either LDL or the function of cholesterol and triglycerides
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- 1993
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14. Paraneoplastic pyoderma gangrenosum successfully treated with minocycline and low-dose steroids
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Catherine C. Foley and Mary E. Laing
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Diseases ,business.industry ,Low dose ,medicine ,Dermatology ,Minocycline ,medicine.disease ,business ,Pyoderma gangrenosum ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2014
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15. Numerical comparisons of two formulations of the logistic regressive models with the mixed model in segregation analysis of discrete traits
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George E. Bonney, Florence Demenais, and A. E. Laing
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Mixed model ,Logarithm ,Epidemiology ,Estimation theory ,Linear regression ,Statistics ,Covariate ,Econometrics ,Regression analysis ,Genetics (clinical) ,Statistical hypothesis testing ,Mathematics ,Odds - Abstract
Segregation analysis of discrete traits can be conducted by the classical mixed model and the recently introduced regressive models. The mixed model assumes an underlying liability to the disease, to which a major gene, a multifactorial component, and random environment contribute independently. Affected persons have a liability exceeding a threshold. The regressive logistic models assume that the logarithm of the odds of being affected is a linear function of major genotype effects, the phenotypes of older relatives, and other covariates. A formulation of the regressive models, based on an underlying liability model, has been recently proposed. The regression coefficients on antecedents are expressed in terms of the relevant familial correlations and a one-to-one correspondence with the parameters of the mixed model can thus be established. Computer simulations are conducted to evaluate the fit of the two formulations of the regressive models to the mixed model on nuclear families. The two forms of the class D regressive model provide a good fit to a generated mixed model, in terms of both hypothesis testing and parameter estimation. The simpler class A regressive model, which assumes that the outcomes of children depend solely on the outcomes of parents, is not robust against a sib–sib correlation exceeding that specified by the model, emphasizing testing class A against class D. The studies reported here show that if the true state of nature is that described by the mixed model, then a regressive model will do just as well. Moreover, the regressive models, allowing for more patterns of family dependence, provide a flexible framework to understand gene–environment interactions in complex diseases. © 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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- 1992
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16. Family with 22-derived marker chromosome and late-onset dementia of the Alzheimer type: I. Application of a new model for estimation of the risk of disease associated with the marker
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Joseph M. Berg, Thomas G. Dearie, David F. Andrews, Maire E. Percy, Marlene E. Laing, Donald R. McLachlan, Jocelyn T. Hummel, and Vjerica D. Markovic
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Genetic Markers ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 22 ,Marker chromosome ,Population ,Disease ,Biology ,Degenerative disease ,Alzheimer Disease ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,education ,Genetics (clinical) ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Chromosome Aberrations ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Models, Genetic ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Pedigree ,Female ,Nucleolus organizer region ,Alzheimer's disease - Abstract
We have identified 2 sisters with probable dementia of the Alzheimer type who have an unusual 22-derived marker chromosome with a greatly elongated short arm containing 2 well-separated nucleolus organizer regions. A marker chromosome similar in appearance is uncommon in the general population. Eleven of 24 of their biological relatives were also found to have the marker. The known pedigree of this family encompasses 6 generations in 2 of which there is evidence of 10 cases of dementia of the Alzheimer type. The average age-at-onset of dementia is 65.8 +/- 5.5 years; the average age-at-death among those apparently affected is 74.9 +/- 8.3 years. A new model for the estimation of risk was applied to the family data. Persons in this family with the marker were found to be 4 times more likely to develop dementia than those without the marker, the 95% confidence interval for this risk being 1-50. The probability that the association of dementia and the marker is due to chance alone is .05 (1 in 20).
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- 1991
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17. The influence of contact dermatitis on career change in hairdressers
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Mary E. Laing, Frank C. Powell, Fiona M. Keane, Corina M. Nagle, and Dorothy O'sullivan
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Allergy ,Adolescent ,Hair Dyes ,Hand Dermatoses ,Dermatology ,Beauty Culture ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Immunopathology ,Humans ,Industry ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Allergic contact dermatitis ,Retrospective Studies ,Career Choice ,business.industry ,Work disability ,Skin test ,Middle Aged ,Patch Tests ,medicine.disease ,Dermatitis, Occupational ,Female ,business ,Contact dermatitis ,Follow-Up Studies - Published
- 2006
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18. RESPIRATION OF THE RHIZOMES OF NUPHAR ADVENUM AND OTHER WATER PLANTS
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Harlow E. Laing
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Typha ,biology ,Stolon ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Rhizome ,Sagittaria latifolia ,Aquatic plant ,Botany ,Genetics ,Habit (biology) ,Nuphar ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Scirpus - Abstract
NUMEROUS STUDIES have been made on the respiration of land plants and some on water plants, but very few such studies have been made on semi-submerged water plants (Samantarai, 1938). Yet, from the standpoint of the environment, semi-submerged plants offer very interesting material because of the belief that they were once terrestrial and have subsequently invaded the water, and because it is difficult to understand how the rhizomes of plants with terrestrial form are able to endure the condition of low aeration that exists in the mud at the bottom of a pond (Cole, 1932).2 That this ability is not due to particular structural features may be deduced from the fact that rhizomes of very diverse structures are found imbedded in the submerged mud. For example, Furthermore, the ability to endure the nearly anaerobic conditions of the submerged mud is not associated with a particular habit of growth and fruiting, because all of the species of thick spongy rhizomes mentioned above as well as one of the toughest and firmest of rhizomes to be found anywhere, namely, that of Scirpus validus, grow progressively through the mud, branching only occasionally, sending up fruiting culms at irregular intervals, and always dying and becoming decayed at the rear; while the hard young rhizomes of Typha latifolia and Sparganiurn eurycarpum and the corms of Sagittaria latifolia are formed one at the terminal end of each of the slender spongy stolons that radiate from a parent plant which dies at the end of its fruiting season.
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- 1940
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19. THE COMPOSITION OF THE INTERNAL ATMOSPHERE OF NUPHAR ADVENUM AND OTHER WATER PLANTS
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Harlow E. Laing
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Atmosphere ,Aquatic plant ,Botany ,Genetics ,Nuphar ,Composition (visual arts) ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1940
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20. RESPIRATION OF THE LEAVES OF NUPHAR ADVENUM AND TYPHA LATIFOLIA
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Harlow E. Laing
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Typha ,Respiration ,Botany ,Genetics ,Nuphar ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1940
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21. Comparative studies of predation by Phytoseiulus persimilis athias‐henriot and Metaseiulus occidentalis ( <scp>Nesbitt</scp> ) (Acarina: Phytoseiidae) on populations of Tetranychus urticae koch (Acarina: Tetranychidae)
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C. B. Huffaker and J. E. Laing
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Phytoseiidae ,Ecology ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Predation - Published
- 1969
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22. 'Competitive displacement' without a shortage of resources?
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J. E. Laing and C. B. Huffaker
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Natural resource economics ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Displacement (orthopedic surgery) ,Economic shortage ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1972
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23. ChemInform Abstract: SYNTHESES OF TRANS ALKEN-1-OLS AS CANDIDATES FOR INSECT SEX ATTRACTANTS
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P. I. SVIRSKAYA, C. C. LEZNOFF, J. WEATHERSTON, and J. E. LAING
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General Medicine - Published
- 1979
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