ELIZA cgi-bash version rev. 1.91
- Medical English LInking keywords finder for the PubMed Zipped Archive (ELIZA) -

return kwic search for compared to out of >500 occurrences
270181 occurrences (No.97 in the rank) during 5 years in the PubMed. [cache]
218) Compared to controls, spinal cords from rodents treated with nanoparticle site-directed estrogen demonstrated significantly decreased post-injury lesion size, reactive gliosis, and glial scar formation.
--- ABSTRACT ---
PMID:32680442 DOI:10.1089/neu.2020.7047
2021 Journal of neurotrauma
* Nanoparticle-Based Estrogen Delivery to Spinal Cord Injury Site Reduces Local Parenchymal Destruction and Improves Functional Recovery.
- Spinal cord injury (SCI) patients sustain significant functional impairments; this is causally related to restricted neuronal regeneration after injury. The ensuing reactive gliosis, inflammatory cascade, and glial scar formation impede axonal regrowth. Although systemic anti-inflammatory agents (steroids) have been previously administered to counteract this, no current therapeutic is approved for post-injury neuronal regeneration, in part because of related side effects. Likewise, therapeutic systemic estrogen levels exhibit neuroprotective properties, but dose-dependent side effects are prohibitive. The current study thus uses low-dose estrogen delivery to the spinal cord injury (SCI) site using an agarose gel patch embedded with estrogen-loaded nanoparticles. Compared to controls, spinal cords from rodents treated with nanoparticle site-directed estrogen demonstrated significantly decreased post-injury lesion size, reactive gliosis, and glial scar formation. However, axonal regeneration, vascular endothelial growth factor production, and glial-cell-derived neurotrophic factor levels were increased with estrogen administration. Concomitantly improved locomotor and bladder functional recovery were observed with estrogen administration after injury. Therefore, low-dose site-directed estrogen may provide a future approach for enhanced neuronal repair and functional recovery in SCI patients.
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[frequency of next (right) word to compared to]
(1)95 the (14)5 conventional (27)2 ER+ (40)2 measures
(2)19 other (15)5 placebo (28)2 LONG (41)2 patients
(3)18 those (16)5 that (29)2 PLWH (42)2 placebo,
(4)16 healthy (17)4 standard (30)2 TM (43)2 poor
(5)13 a (18)4 women (31)2 TomTec (44)2 swabs
(6)13 controls (19)3 group (32)2 WT (45)2 therapy
(7)10 control (20)3 males (33)2 allogeneic (46)2 traditional
(8)7 baseline (21)3 no (34)2 any (47)2 uninfected
(9)7 their (22)3 non-obese (35)2 children (48)2 untreated
(10)6 control, (23)3 wild-type (36)2 expert (49)2 usual
(11)6 individuals (24)2 B-385 (37)2 females
(12)6 normal (25)2 CON (38)2 field
(13)5 controls, (26)2 CS- (39)2 irradiated

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--- WordNet output for compared --- =>前年同期比で(は) Overview of verb compare The verb compare has 4 senses (first 3 from tagged texts) 1. (57) compare -- (examine and note the similarities or differences of; "John compared his haircut to his friend's"; "We compared notes after we had both seen the movie") 2. (12) compare -- (be comparable; "This car does not compare with our line of Mercedes") 3. (9) compare, liken, equate -- (consider or describe as similar, equal, or analogous; "We can compare the Han dynasty to the Romans"; "You cannot equate success in financial matters with greed") 4. compare -- (to form the comparative or superlative form on an adjective or adverb) --- WordNet end ---