首页 | 官方网站   微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   12557篇
  免费   851篇
  国内免费   38篇
医药卫生   13446篇
  2023年   73篇
  2022年   43篇
  2021年   251篇
  2020年   143篇
  2019年   252篇
  2018年   419篇
  2017年   302篇
  2016年   261篇
  2015年   296篇
  2014年   375篇
  2013年   540篇
  2012年   796篇
  2011年   925篇
  2010年   529篇
  2009年   425篇
  2008年   808篇
  2007年   898篇
  2006年   825篇
  2005年   835篇
  2004年   810篇
  2003年   803篇
  2002年   734篇
  2001年   287篇
  2000年   361篇
  1999年   262篇
  1998年   106篇
  1997年   64篇
  1996年   56篇
  1995年   56篇
  1994年   64篇
  1993年   45篇
  1992年   99篇
  1991年   81篇
  1990年   64篇
  1989年   69篇
  1988年   46篇
  1987年   41篇
  1986年   44篇
  1985年   34篇
  1984年   20篇
  1982年   22篇
  1981年   26篇
  1979年   26篇
  1978年   28篇
  1977年   24篇
  1976年   26篇
  1975年   14篇
  1974年   16篇
  1973年   13篇
  1972年   19篇
排序方式: 共有10000条查询结果,搜索用时 390 毫秒
81.
82.
83.
Neural basis for verb processing in Alzheimer's disease: an fMRI study   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Patients with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) have difficulty understanding verbs. To investigate the neural basis for this deficit, the authors used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine patterns of neural activation during verb processing in 11 AD patients compared with 16 healthy seniors. Subjects judged the pleasantness of verbs, including MOTION verbs and COGNITION verbs. Healthy seniors and AD patients both activated posterolateral temporal and inferior frontal regions during judgments of verbs. These activations were relatively reduced and somewhat changed in their anatomic distribution in AD patients compared with healthy seniors, particularly for the subcategory of MOTION verbs, but AD patients showed minimal activation in association with COGNITION verbs. These findings imply that poor performance with verbs in AD is due in part to altered activation of the large-scale neural network that supports verb processing.  相似文献   
84.
The facultatively intracellular pathogen Brucella, characterized by its capacity to replicate in professional and non professional phagocytes, also causes abortion in ruminants. This property has been linked to the presence of erythritol in the placenta, as brucellae preferentially utilize erythritol. The ery operon encodes enzymes involved in erythritol metabolism, and a link with virulence has since been discussed. Allelic exchange mutants in eryC of Brucella suis were erythritol sensitive in vitro with a MIC of 1 to 5 mM of erythritol. Their multiplication in macrophage-like cells was 50- to 90-fold reduced, but complementation of the mutant restored wild-type levels of intracellular multiplication and the capacity to use erythritol as a sole carbon source. In vivo, the eryC mutant colonized the spleens of infected BALB/c mice to a significantly lower extent than the wild type and the complemented strain. Interestingly, eryC mutants that were in addition spontaneously erythritol tolerant nevertheless exhibited wild-type-like intramacrophagic and intramurine replication. We concluded from our results that erythritol was not an essential carbon source for the pathogen in the macrophage host cell but that the inactivation of the eryC gene significantly reduced the intramacrophagic and intramurine fitness of B. suis.  相似文献   
85.
Polyclonal antimannan immunoglobulin G (IgG) activates the classical complement pathway and accelerates initiation of the alternative pathway by Canidida albicans. This dual role was assessed for two antimannan IgM monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). MAb B6.1 is specific for an epitope on the acid-labile portion of C. albicans phosphomannan; MAb B6 is specific for an epitope on the acid-stable region. Both MAbs were potent activators of the classical pathway but poor facilitators of alternative pathway initiation.Candida albicans activates the human complement system via both the classical and the alternative pathways, leading to deposition of opsonic complement fragments on the yeast cell surface (8, 10, 18). In previous studies, we described a critical role for naturally occurring antimannan immunoglobulin G (IgG) in complement activation by C. albicans. Those studies used a kinetic assay for C3 deposition on the yeast and immunofluorescence evaluation of the sites of C3 binding (10, 17, 18). Deposition of C3 onto C. albicans cells incubated in normal human serum (NHS) occurs rapidly via the classical pathway and can be detected within the first 2 min of incubation. If the classical pathway is blocked by chelation of Ca2+ with EGTA, C3 deposition occurs via the alternative pathway, but C3 deposition is delayed and a 6-min incubation is required before bound C3 is readily detectable on the yeast surface. Removal of naturally occurring antimannan IgG from the serum by mannan absorption profoundly delays accumulation of C3 on the yeast cell surface, with 12 min or more of incubation being required before appreciable amounts of bound C3 are detected. However, this 12-min delay can be overcome by supplementation of the mannan-absorbed serum with affinity-purified human antimannan IgG in the absence of EGTA to mediate classical pathway initiation or shortened to 6 min in the presence of EGTA to allow antibody-facilitated activation of the alternative pathway. These observations demonstrate a dual role for antimannan IgG in serum from healthy adults in complement activation by C. albicans. Antimannan IgG mediates activation of the classical pathway and facilitates initiation of the alternative pathway (17, 18).In studies described above, we used polyclonal antimannan IgG purified from pooled human plasma. Since C. albicans cells express a number of immunodominant mannan components recognized by rabbits (15, 16), the human polyclonal antimannan IgG likely contains a range of specificities for distinct mannan determinants. It has been shown that rabbit antibodies that are reactive with three different cell wall determinants of group A streptococci display differential abilities to activate the classical or alternative pathway (2). Although the antibodies specific for three different cell wall epitopes all activated the classical pathway, only antibody specific for the N-acetyl-d-glucosamine epitope activated the alternative pathway (2). In a separate study, capsular as well as noncapsular antibodies were found to direct classical-pathway-mediated killing of Haemophilus influenzae type b, whereas only the capsular antibodies promoted killing by the alternative pathway (12). These studies provide evidence that epitope specificity may influence the ability of an antibody to activate the alternative pathway and prompted us to examine whether antibodies that recognize different mannan determinants are able to mediate activation of the classical and alternative pathways by C. albicans.Two IgM monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that recognize distinct mannan determinants were compared for their abilities to activate the classical or alternative pathway. MAb B6.1 is specific for an acid-labile component of the Candida phosphomannan complex, and MAb B6 is specific for an acid-stable component (5). The MAbs were produced commercially (Montana ImmunoTech, Inc., Bozeman, Mont.).C. albicans CA-1 was grown as yeast forms to stationary phase in glucose (2%)-yeast extract (0.3%)-peptone (1%) broth for 24 h at 37°C as described elsewhere (4, 6, 10). The mannan of CA-1 yeast was purified as described previously (7, 18) and coupled to CNBr-Sepahrose 4B (Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden) (18).Pooled NHS was prepared from peripheral blood from at least 10 healthy adult donors and stored at −80°C. C3 was isolated from frozen human plasma (9, 13) and stored at −80°C until used. C3 was labeled with 125I as described previously (3) by use of IODO-GEN reagent (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.). NHS was absorbed with mannan-Sepharose 4B to remove antimannan antibodies (18).Kinetics of C3 binding were assayed by the method of Kozel et al. (10). To determine whether MAb B6 or B6.1 activates the classical pathway, 2 × 106 yeast cells were incubated at 37°C in 1 ml of a complement binding medium that contained (i) 40% NHS, mannan-absorbed serum, or mannan-absorbed serum supplemented with MAb B6 or B6.1, (ii) sodium Veronal (5 mM)-buffered saline (142 mM, pH 7.3) containing 0.1% gelatin, 1.5 mM CaCl2, and 1 mM MgCl2, and (iii) 125I-labeled C3. To study whether MAb B6 or B6.1 plays a role in alternative pathway initiation, yeast cells were incubated in the manner described above except that the binding medium was not supplemented with Ca2+ and contained 5 mM EGTA and 5 mM MgCl2. At various time intervals from 2 to 16 min, 50-μl samples were withdrawn in duplicate and added to 200 μl of phosphate-buffered saline–0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate–20 mM EDTA in Millipore MABX-N12 filter plates fitted with BV 1.2-μm-pore-size filter membranes (Millipore, Bedford, Mass.). The cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline–0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate, and filter-bound radioactivity was determined with a gamma counter. Nonspecific binding was estimated from cells incubated in NHS containing EDTA and was subtracted from the total counts.Mannan absorption of serum profoundly delayed C3 accumulation on yeast from 2 min to approximately 10 min (Fig. (Fig.11 and and2).2). However, addition of either MAb B6 or MAb B6.1 at 50 μg per ml of reaction mixture to the absorbed serum generated rapid activation kinetics characteristic of C3 deposition via the classical pathway (Fig. (Fig.1)1) (10, 17, 18). This observation was not unexpected, as polyvalent IgM is known to be a potent activator of the classical pathway. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1Effect of MAb B6 or B6.1 on the kinetics of C3 deposition on C. albicans cells via the classical pathway. Yeast cells were incubated in a C3 binding medium containing (i) 40% NHS (•), (ii) 40% mannan-absorbed NHS (○), (iii) 40% mannan-absorbed NHS supplemented with MAb B6 (▴), or (iv) 40% mannan-absorbed NHS supplemented with MAb B6.1 (▿) at 50 μg per ml of reaction mixture. C3 deposition patterns from three independent assays were similar; results from one representative assay are shown.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2Effect of MAb B6 or B6.1 on the kinetics of C3 deposition on C. albicans cells via the alternative pathway. Yeast cells were incubated in a C3 binding medium containing (i) 40% NHS (•), (ii) 40% NHS–EGTA (■), (iii) 40% mannan-absorbed NHS containing EGTA (○), (vi) 40% mannan-absorbed NHS containing EGTA supplemented with MAb B6 (▴), or (iv) 40% mannan-absorbed NHS supplemented with MAb B6.1 (▿) at 50 μg per ml of reaction mixture. C3 deposition patterns from four independent assays were similar; results from one representative assay are shown.The effects of MAbs B6 and B6.1 on activation of the alternative pathway were assessed by addition of the antibodies to mannan-absorbed serum in the presence of EGTA. The results (Fig. (Fig.2)2) showed that neither MAb B6 nor MAb B6.1 at 50 μg per ml of reaction mixture altered the alternative pathway activity of the mannan-absorbed serum. To determine whether the inability of MAb B6 or B6.1 to facilitate initiation of the alternative pathway was influenced by antibody concentration, the experiment represented in Fig. Fig.22 was repeated with mannan-absorbed serum that was supplemented with 10 to 160 μg of MAb B6 or B6.1 per ml. These antibody concentrations were chosen because in our previous studies we found that affinity-purified human antimannan IgG activates both the classical and alternative pathways (17). However, at 10, 40, or 160 μg per ml of reaction mixture, both antibodies failed to enhance alternative pathway activity of mannan-absorbed serum but promoted classical pathway activity (data not shown).The observation that both MAbs were unable to enhance alternative pathway activity was unexpected. Our previous studies showed that addition of polyclonal antimannan IgG to mannan-absorbed NHS containing EGTA produced C3 binding kinetics that were indistinguishable from the kinetics observed with nonabsorbed NHS containing EGTA (17). We further demonstrated IgG-dependent initiation of the alternative pathway by C. albicans using the six purified alternative pathway proteins (17).There are at least three possible explanations for the failure of MAbs B6 and B6.1 to facilitate activation of the alternative pathway. First, it is possible that antimannan antibodies of the IgM class are unable to enhance C3 deposition via the alternative pathway. However, there is evidence that polyclonal IgM is able to enhance alternative pathway-mediated lysis of rabbit erythrocytes by NHS (11, 14). Second, the ability of an antibody to facilitate deposition of C3 via the alternative pathway could be epitope specific; MAbs B6 and B6.1 could have the wrong epitope specificity. As noted above, Eisenberg and Schwab (2) found that polyclonal antibodies specific for one antigen found on group A streptococcal cell walls were able to facilitate initiation of the alternative pathway, whereas antibodies specific for two other antigens were not. If antibody-facilitated activation of the alternative pathway is dependent on epitope specificity, such a finding might influence strategies for induction of protective immunity to Candida. Optimal immunization may require an immunogen that induces antibodies with epitope specificities needed to facilitate activation of the alternative pathway. Finally, we cannot exclude the possibility that human antimannan antibodies are able to facilitate activation of the alternative pathway, whereas mouse antibodies lack this capability.In studies involving a murine model of disseminated candidiasis, MAb B6.1 was shown to be protective, whereas MAb B6 was not (4). However, the protection mechanisms remain to be elucidated. In an in vitro assay, MAb B6.1 but not MAb B6 was found to enhance candidacidal activity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the presence of fresh mouse serum, suggesting the involvement of mouse complement in the killing (1). Although assessing the role of complement in MAb B6.1-mediated protection was beyond the scope of this study, our observation that the two antibodies mediate similar kinetics of C3 deposition for C. albicans does not preclude the possibility that the composition and/or accessibility of opsonic complement fragments bound to the yeast cells might differ following complement activation by these two antibodies. Alternatively, the concerted action of several protective functions, including activation of the complement system, may be required for MAb B6.1-mediated protection.  相似文献   
86.
Previously, it was shown that type IVB pili encoded by the Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi pil operon are used to facilitate bacterial entry into human intestinal epithelial cells in vitro and that such entry is inhibited by purified prepilin (pre-PilS) protein (X.-L. Zhang, I. S. M. Tsui, C. M. C. Yip, A. W. Y. Fung, D. K.-H. Wong, X. Dai, Y. Yang, J. Hackett, and C. Morris, Infect. Immun. 68:3067-3073, 2000). The pil operon concludes with a simple shufflon, and a recombinase gene product (Rci) inverts DNA in the C-terminal region of the pilV gene to allow synthesis of two distinct PilV proteins, PilV1 and PilV2, which are presumptive minor pilus proteins. We show here that the type IVB pili mediate bacterial self-association, but only when the PilV1 and PilV2 proteins are not expressed. This may be achieved in wild-type serovar Typhi by rapid DNA inversion activity of the shufflon. We show that the inversion activity inhibits the expression of genes inserted between the 19-bp inverted repeats used for Rci-mediated recombination and that the activity of Rci increases when DNA is supercoiled. The data suggest that serovar Typhi self-associates under conditions (such as low oxygen tension in the gut) that favor DNA supercoiling. These results explain (i) the function of the serovar Typhi shufflon and (ii) why there are only two possible shufflon states, in contrast to the many possible states of other shufflon systems. The data further indicate that a very early step in serovar Typhi pathogenesis may be type IVB pilus-mediated self-association of bacteria in the anaerobic human small intestine prior to invasion of the human gut epithelium. The suggested type IVB pilus-dependent step in typhoid fever pathogenesis may partially explain the enhanced invasiveness of serovar Typhi for humans.  相似文献   
87.
88.
89.
BACKGROUND: Human follicular fluid contains several substances, such as cytokines and growth factors, which may affect follicular growth and maturation. The present study examines the relative contribution of macrophages and granulosa cells in the production of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and adrenomedullin in the human ovulatory follicle. METHODS: Both follicular fluid samples and blood samples were obtained at the time of oocyte retrieval following ovarian stimulation from 20 women undergoing IVF treatment because of male infertility. Human follicular fluid macrophages and luteinized granulosa cells were obtained from pooled follicular fluid of individual patients. Accumulation of VEGF and adrenomedullin in the culture medium of the isolated macrophages and human granulosa cells was determined at variable time intervals ranging from 0 to 48 h. Plasma and follicular fluid concentrations of VEGF and adrenomedullin were also measured. RESULTS: The follicular fluid concentrations of VEGF and adrenomedullin were significantly higher than those found in plasma. After 48 h, accumulation of VEGF in the culture medium of follicular fluid macrophages was significantly higher than that released in the culture medium of luteinized granulosa cells. In contrast, the production rate of adrenomedullin by follicular fluid macrophages was similar to that found in granulosa cells. VEGF secreted by follicular fluid macrophages increased progressively within 48 h of cell culture. A similar response pattern was observed with the culture medium of luteinized granulosa cells, but with lower production rates. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests for the first time that both luteinized granulosa cells and macrophages actively secrete VEGF and adrenomedullin into follicular fluid in the human ovary.  相似文献   
90.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司    京ICP备09084417号-23

京公网安备 11010802026262号