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Excipients -- therapeutic use : Controlled drug delivery : the role of self-assembling multi-task excipients / edited by M.A. Mateescu, P. Ispas-Szabo, E. Assaad  2015 1
  Excise -- 2 Related Subjects   2
Excise.   2
excise duty. : Inventory of estimated budgetary support and tax expenditures for fossil fuels 2013  2012 1
Excise tax   14
Excise tax -- Central America : Central American tax reform : trends and possibilities / Janet Stotsky and Asegedech WoldeMariam  2002 1
Excise tax -- Great Britain : The laws of excise : being a collection of the existing statutes relating to the revenue of excise, with practical notes, and an appendix of select cases / by James Bell ; and revised by authority of the honourable Commissioners of Inland Revenue by John H. Dwelly  1873 1
Excise tax -- Great Britain -- History   2
Excise tax -- Law and legislation.   9
Excise tax -- Law and legislation -- Australia.   10
Excise tax -- Law and legislation -- Australia -- Criminal provisions. : Administrative penalties in customs and excise / the Law Reform Commission  1992 1
Excise tax -- Law and legislation -- Great Britain   2
Excise tax -- Law and legislation -- Great Britain -- History : Excise taxation and the origins of public debt / D'Maris Coffman  2013 1
Excise tax -- U.S. states : Trade barriers affecting interstate commerce in alcoholic beverages : an official study / by the Joint Committee of the States to Study Alcoholic Beverage Laws  1952 1
Excise tax -- United States   3
Excise tax -- United States -- States : Trade barriers affecting interstate commerce in alcoholic beverages : an official study / by the Joint Committee of the States to Study Alcoholic Beverage Laws  1952 1
Excision (ethnologie) -- Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée. : Gender rituals : female initiation in Melanesia / edited by Nancy C. Lutkehaus and Paul B. Roscoe  2011 1
 

Excision of elbow -- See Elbow Surgery


  1
 

Excision of hip -- See Hip joint Surgery


  1
 

Excision of knee -- See Knee Surgery


  1
 

Excision Repair -- See DNA Repair


The reconstruction of a continuous two-stranded DNA molecule without mismatch from a molecule which contained damaged regions. The major repair mechanisms are excision repair, in which defective regions in one strand are excised and resynthesized using the complementary base pairing information in the intact strand; photoreactivation repair, in which the lethal and mutagenic effects of ultraviolet light are eliminated; and post-replication repair, in which the primary lesions are not repaired, but the gaps in one daughter duplex are filled in by incorporation of portions of the other (undamaged) daughter duplex. Excision repair and post-replication repair are sometimes referred to as "dark repair" because they do not require light
  1
 

Excision Repair, Base -- See DNA Repair


The reconstruction of a continuous two-stranded DNA molecule without mismatch from a molecule which contained damaged regions. The major repair mechanisms are excision repair, in which defective regions in one strand are excised and resynthesized using the complementary base pairing information in the intact strand; photoreactivation repair, in which the lethal and mutagenic effects of ultraviolet light are eliminated; and post-replication repair, in which the primary lesions are not repaired, but the gaps in one daughter duplex are filled in by incorporation of portions of the other (undamaged) daughter duplex. Excision repair and post-replication repair are sometimes referred to as "dark repair" because they do not require light
  1
 

Excision Repair, Nucleotide -- See DNA Repair


The reconstruction of a continuous two-stranded DNA molecule without mismatch from a molecule which contained damaged regions. The major repair mechanisms are excision repair, in which defective regions in one strand are excised and resynthesized using the complementary base pairing information in the intact strand; photoreactivation repair, in which the lethal and mutagenic effects of ultraviolet light are eliminated; and post-replication repair, in which the primary lesions are not repaired, but the gaps in one daughter duplex are filled in by incorporation of portions of the other (undamaged) daughter duplex. Excision repair and post-replication repair are sometimes referred to as "dark repair" because they do not require light
  1
 

Excision Repairs -- See DNA Repair


The reconstruction of a continuous two-stranded DNA molecule without mismatch from a molecule which contained damaged regions. The major repair mechanisms are excision repair, in which defective regions in one strand are excised and resynthesized using the complementary base pairing information in the intact strand; photoreactivation repair, in which the lethal and mutagenic effects of ultraviolet light are eliminated; and post-replication repair, in which the primary lesions are not repaired, but the gaps in one daughter duplex are filled in by incorporation of portions of the other (undamaged) daughter duplex. Excision repair and post-replication repair are sometimes referred to as "dark repair" because they do not require light
  1
  Excision (Surgery) -- 3 Related Subjects   3
Excision (Surgery)   2
Excision (Surgery) -- Handbooks, manuals, etc : Manual of total mesorectal excision / edited by Brendan Moran, Richard John Heald  2013 1
Excitatie.   3
 

Excitation analysis, Fluorescent -- See X-ray spectroscopy


  1
 

Excitation, Electronic -- See Electronic excitation


  1
Excitation électronique. : Primary photoexcitations in conjugated polymers : molecular exciton versus semiconductor band model / editor, Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci  1997 1
 

Excitation Microscopies, Multiphoton -- See Microscopy, Fluorescence, Multiphoton


Fluorescence microscopy utilizing multiple low-energy photons to produce the excitation event of the fluorophore (endogenous fluorescent molecules in living tissues or FLUORESCENT DYES). Multiphoton microscopes have a simplified optical path in the emission side due to the lack of an emission pinhole, which is necessary with normal confocal microscopes. Ultimately this allows spatial isolation of the excitation event, enabling deeper imaging into optically thick tissue, while restricting photobleaching and phototoxicity to the area being imaged
  1
 

Excitation Microscopy, Multiphoton -- See Microscopy, Fluorescence, Multiphoton


Fluorescence microscopy utilizing multiple low-energy photons to produce the excitation event of the fluorophore (endogenous fluorescent molecules in living tissues or FLUORESCENT DYES). Multiphoton microscopes have a simplified optical path in the emission side due to the lack of an emission pinhole, which is necessary with normal confocal microscopes. Ultimately this allows spatial isolation of the excitation event, enabling deeper imaging into optically thick tissue, while restricting photobleaching and phototoxicity to the area being imaged
  1
Excitation nucléaire. : Nuclear structure from a simple perspective / R.F. Casten  1990 1
 

Excitation, Nuclear -- See Nuclear excitation


  1
Excitation (Physiology)   2
Excitation (Physiology) -- Mathematical models   2
 

Excitations, Collective -- See Collective excitations


  1
Excitations collectives. : Nuclear structure from a simple perspective / R.F. Casten  1990 1
 

Excitations, Elementary -- See Quasiparticles (Physics)


  1
 

Excitations, Spin -- See Spin excitations


  1
Excitatory Amino Acid Agents : Biochemical approaches for glutamatergic neurotransmission / editors Sandrine Parrot, Luc Denoroy  2017 1
 

Excitatory Amino Acid Receptor -- See Receptors, Glutamate


Cell-surface proteins that bind glutamate and trigger changes which influence the behavior of cells. Glutamate receptors include ionotropic receptors (AMPA, kainate, and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors), which directly control ion channels, and metabotropic receptors which act through second messenger systems. Glutamate receptors are the most common mediators of fast excitatory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system. They have also been implicated in the mechanisms of memory and of many diseases
  1
 

Excitatory Amino Acid Receptors -- See Receptors, Glutamate


Cell-surface proteins that bind glutamate and trigger changes which influence the behavior of cells. Glutamate receptors include ionotropic receptors (AMPA, kainate, and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors), which directly control ion channels, and metabotropic receptors which act through second messenger systems. Glutamate receptors are the most common mediators of fast excitatory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system. They have also been implicated in the mechanisms of memory and of many diseases
  1
  Excitatory amino acids -- 3 Related Subjects   3
Excitatory amino acids -- Pathophysiology : Excitatory amino acid transmission in health and disease / Robert Balazs, Richard J. Bridges, Carl W. Cotman ; illustrated by Cheryl A. Cotman  2006 1
Excitatory amino acids -- Physiological effect : Excitatory amino acid transmission in health and disease / Robert Balazs, Richard J. Bridges, Carl W. Cotman ; illustrated by Cheryl A. Cotman  2006 1
Excitatory Amino Acids -- physiology : Excitatory amino acid transmission in health and disease / Robert Balazs, Richard J. Bridges, Carl W. Cotman ; illustrated by Cheryl A. Cotman  2006 1
excitatory mechanisms. : The Brain Code : Mechanisms of Information Transfer and the Role of the Corpus Callosum / Norman D. Cook  2018 1
 

Excitatory Neurotoxins -- See Neurotoxins


Toxic substances from microorganisms, plants or animals that interfere with the functions of the nervous system. Most venoms contain neurotoxic substances. Myotoxins are included in this concept
  1
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