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cetylpyridinium chloride anhydrous and Turner Syndrome

cetylpyridinium chloride anhydrous has been researched along with Turner Syndrome in 6 studies

Research

Studies (6)

TimeframeStudies, this research(%)All Research%
pre-19900 (0.00)18.7374
1990's4 (66.67)18.2507
2000's0 (0.00)29.6817
2010's2 (33.33)24.3611
2020's0 (0.00)2.80

Authors

AuthorsStudies
Alföldi, J; Bellott, DW; Brown, LG; Buhay, C; Cho, TJ; Ding, Y; Dugan, S; Fulton, RS; Gibbs, RA; Graves, T; Holder, M; Hughes, JF; Khan, Z; Koutseva, N; Kremitzki, C; Lee, S; Lewis, L; Morton, D; Muzny, DM; Nazareth, L; Page, DC; Pyntikova, T; Rock, S; Rozen, S; Skaletsky, H; Wang, Q; Warren, WC; Watt, J; Wilson, RK; Zaghlul, S1
Baldin, AD; Baptista, MT; D'Souza-Li, LF; Fabbri, T; Guerra, G; Lemos-Marini, SH; Maciel-Guerra, AT; Siviero-Miachon, AA; Spinola-Castro, AM1
Neely, EK; Rosenfeld, RG1
Miller, SK1

Reviews

1 review(s) available for cetylpyridinium chloride anhydrous and Turner Syndrome

ArticleYear
Use and abuse of human growth hormone.
    Annual review of medicine, 1994, Volume: 45

    Topics: Adult; Body Height; Child; Cocarcinogenesis; Drug Utilization; Ethics, Medical; Female; Growth; Growth Hormone; Health; Humans; Male; Patient Selection; Recombinant Proteins; Resource Allocation; Risk Assessment; Turner Syndrome

1994

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for cetylpyridinium chloride anhydrous and Turner Syndrome

ArticleYear
Mammalian Y chromosomes retain widely expressed dosage-sensitive regulators.
    Nature, 2014, Apr-24, Volume: 508, Issue:7497

    Topics: Animals; Chromosomes, Human, X; Chromosomes, Human, Y; Disease; Evolution, Molecular; Female; Gene Dosage; Gene Expression Regulation; Health; Humans; Male; Mammals; Marsupialia; Molecular Sequence Annotation; Molecular Sequence Data; Protein Biosynthesis; Protein Stability; Selection, Genetic; Sequence Homology; Sex Characteristics; Spermatogenesis; Testis; Transcription, Genetic; Turner Syndrome; X Chromosome; Y Chromosome

2014
Effects of growth hormone on body proportions in Turner syndrome compared with non-treated patients and normal women.
    Journal of endocrinological investigation, 2010, Volume: 33, Issue:10

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Body Height; Body Size; Body Weights and Measures; Case-Control Studies; Child; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Head; Health; Human Growth Hormone; Humans; Turner Syndrome; Young Adult

2010
Little bigger, little better.
    Lancet (London, England), 1994, Sep-03, Volume: 344, Issue:8923

    Topics: Child, Preschool; Down Syndrome; Female; Genetic Diseases, Inborn; Growth; Growth Disorders; Growth Hormone; Health; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Patient Selection; Recombinant Proteins; Risk Assessment; Therapeutic Human Experimentation; Turner Syndrome

1994
Not everything is in the genes.
    Nature, 1997, Jun-19, Volume: 387, Issue:6635

    Topics: Behavioral Research; Female; Genes; Genetic Determinism; Genetics, Behavioral; Health; Humans; Male; Social Behavior; Turner Syndrome; X Chromosome

1997
Ethics lobby forces rethink on growth hormones.
    New scientist (1971), 1992, Aug-15, Volume: 135, Issue:1834

    Topics: Child; Chromosome Aberrations; Chromosome Disorders; Control Groups; DNA, Recombinant; Ethical Review; Ethics; Ethics Committees; Ethics Committees, Research; Federal Government; Government; Government Regulation; Growth Disorders; Health; Hormones; Human Experimentation; Humans; Jurisprudence; National Institutes of Health (U.S.); Nontherapeutic Human Experimentation; Patient Care; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Placebos; Politics; Research Design; Risk; Risk Assessment; Social Control, Formal; Turner Syndrome; United States

1992