Search Results - "Alves, M.E.A.F."

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  1. 1

    Incidence of Oral Lesions in HIV-1-infected Women: Reduction with HAART by Greenspan, D., Gange, S.J., Phelan, J.A., Navazesh, M., Alves, M.E.A.F., MacPhail, L.A., Mulligan, R., Greenspan, J.S.

    Published in Journal of dental research (01-02-2004)
    “…Few studies assess the effectiveness of HAART on reducing the incidence and recurrence of oral lesions. We investigated such changes among 503 HIV+ women over…”
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    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Dental Caries in HIV-seropositive Women by Phelan, J.A., Mulligan, R., Nelson, E., Brunelle, J., Alves, M.E.A.F., Navazesh, M., Greenspan, D.

    Published in Journal of dental research (01-11-2004)
    “…Reports that compare dental caries indices in HIV-seropositive (HIV+) subjects with HIV-seronegative (HIV-) subjects are rare. The objective of this study was…”
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  3. 3

    Association of gingival crevicular fluid aspartate aminotransferase levels with histopathology during ligature-induced periodontitis in the beagle dog by Cohen, R L, Alves, M E, Crawford, J M, McSwiggin, T, Chambers, D A

    Published in Journal of dental research (01-06-1991)
    “…Previous investigations have shown a clear association between the presence of the enzyme aspartate aminotransferase (AST) in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF)…”
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  4. 4

    Topographic distribution of Thy-1 positive cells in epithelial tissues of BALB/c mice by Cohen, R L, Alves, M E, Ostrega, M S, Belcaster, G, Chambers, D A

    Published in Archives of oral biology (1987)
    “…Epithelial sheets prepared from murine oral epithelia (palate, lining mucosa, gingiva) and oesophagus contained dendritic and round Thy-1 positive (+) cells…”
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  5. 5

    Disarming canine teeth of nonhuman primates using the submucosal vital root retention technique by Schofield, J C, Alves, M E, Hughes, K W, Bennett, B T

    Published in Laboratory animal science (Chicago) (01-04-1991)
    “…Removing or reducing the size of canine teeth of baboons and macaques has become an accepted practice to minimize the potential for injury to laboratory animal…”
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