Publications
Chosen filters:
Chosen filters:
Plaque production by group A arboviruses. I. Influence of D.E.A.E.-dextran on plaques under agar and agarose. Plaque production under carboxymethylcellulose Institute of Tropical Medicine
Specific Targeting of Atherosclerotic Plaques in ApoE(-/-) Mice Using a New Camelid sdAb Binding the Vulnerable Plaque Marker LOX-1. Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Purpose
Molecular imaging has the potential to provide quantitative information about specific biological aspects of developing atherosclerotic lesions. This requires the generation of reliable, highly specific plaque tracers. This study reports a new camelid single-domain antibody fragment (sdAb) targeting the Lectin-like oxidized low-density lipoprotein receptor (LOX-1), a biomarker for the detection and molecular phenotyping of ...
Molecular imaging has the potential to provide quantitative information about specific biological aspects of developing atherosclerotic lesions. This requires the generation of reliable, highly specific plaque tracers. This study reports a new camelid single-domain antibody fragment (sdAb) targeting the Lectin-like oxidized low-density lipoprotein receptor (LOX-1), a biomarker for the detection and molecular phenotyping of ...
Selective removal of macrophages in atherosclerotic plaques as a pharmacological approach for plaque stabilization: benefits vs. potential complications University of Antwerp
Atherosclerotic plaque destabilization is a major cause of unstable angina, myocardial infarction, and sudden cardiac death. Macrophages, which are an essential component of unstable plaques, play a pivotal role in the destabilization process, whereas smooth muscle cells contribute to plaque stability. Selective removal of macrophages is therefore an interesting pharmacological objective to stabilize vulnerable, rupture-prone lesions. ...
Nul ne plaide par procureur ... Ni par langue étrangère ? University of Antwerp
Goat plague or peste des petits ruminants (PPR) Institute of Tropical Medicine
Plague Institute of Tropical Medicine
Plague, religion and urban space in sixteenth-century Antwerp University of Antwerp
Antwerp’s response to the outbreak of plague in the 1570s offers new insights into the effects of epidemics on urban communities in relation to their religious, economic, and spatial fabric. Antwerp’s transition from a Catholic to Calvinist government in 1577, and back to Catholicism in 1585, allows us to study its reaction to and the effects of plague across religious boundaries within a short time span. Using GIS, we have compared various rich ...
Influence of human activity patterns on epidemiology of plague in Western Usambara Mountains, Tanzania KU Leuven
Human plague has been a recurring public health threat in some villages in the Western Usambara Mountains, Tanzania, in the period between 1980 and 2004. Despite intensive past biological and medical research, the reasons for the plague outbreaks in the same set of villages remain unknown. Plague research needs to broaden its scope and formulate new hypotheses. This study was carried out to establish relationships between the nature and the ...