نتایج جستجو برای: anatolia

تعداد نتایج: 2308  

Journal: :The Cambridge Classical Journal 2017

Journal: :Aydın Sanat İstanbul Aydın Üniversitesi Güzel Sanatlar Fakültesi Dergisi 2015

Journal: :Critical Care 2000
Yusuf Yagmur Ismail Hamdi Kara Mustafa Aldemir Hüseyin Büyükbayram Ibrahim H Tacyildiz Celalettin Keles

Malaria has long been among the most common diseases in the southeast Anatolia region of Turkey. In 1992, 18676 cases were diagnosed in Turkey, and Diyarbakir city had the highest incidence (4168 cases), followed by SanliUrfa city (3578 cases). Malaria was especially common during 1994 and 1995, with 84345 and 82094 cases being diagnosed in these years, respectively. Spontaneous rupture of mala...

Journal: :JPMA. The Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association 2014
Elcin Balci Mustafa Gulgun Oguzhan Babacan Abdulbaki Karaoglu Vural Kesik Sirzat Yesilkaya Turker Turker Duran Tok Ayse Nedret Koc

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the prevalence and risk factors of tinea capitis and tinea pedis in school children in Turkey. METHODS The study included 8122 students from 24 schools in the rural and urban areas around Kayseri,Turkey. We asked every student for their personal identification and also for their sanitation in order to get an idea about dermatophytosis. Samples taken from suspicious lesio...

2015
Yusuf Yagmur Ismail Hamdi Kara Mustafa Aldemir Hüseyin Büyükbayram Ibrahim H Tacyildiz Celalettin Keles

Malaria has long been among the most common diseases in the southeast Anatolia region of Turkey. In 1992, 18676 cases were diagnosed in Turkey, and Diyarbakir city had the highest incidence (4168 cases), followed by SanliUrfa city (3578 cases). Malaria was especially common during 1994 and 1995, with 84345 and 82094 cases being diagnosed in these years, respectively. Spontaneous rupture of mala...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2014
S Johannes Pfleiderer Matthias F Geiger Fabian Herder

Aphanius marassantensis, new species, is described from the Kızılırmak River drainage in northern Anatolia based on colouration, meristic and morphometric characters, and the mtDNA COI barcode region. It is distinguished from other Anatolian Aphanius by one or several of the following characters: a stout body shape (BD/SL 28.2-39.6%), complete scale cover, and 25-28 scales along the lateral lin...

Journal: :Turkish journal of medical sciences 2017
Mehmet Özkan Timurkan Hakan Aydin Osman Aktaş

BACKGROUND/AIM There are limited studies on genotyping and phylogenetic analysis of norovirus in Turkey, and this has not previously been studied in the Eastern Anatolia region. The aim of the present study was to determine the norovirus profile in this region with genotyping and phylogenetic analysis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Included in the study were stool samples obtained from 427 people fro...

2014
DT Korkmaz PG Atak Ç Çelik

Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by fever and serosal inflammation. The reasons for the disorder are mutations in the Mediterranean fever (MEFV) gene; the most common of which are M694V, M680I, M694I and V726A. In this study, we aimed to screen these common mutations of the MEFV gene and then determine the prevalence of FMF according to these m...

Journal: :Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2002
Tomas Hrbek Fahrettin Küçük Tancred Frickey Kai N Stölting Rudolph H Wildekamp Axel Meyer

Phylogenetic relationships of a subset of Aphanius fish comprising central Anatolia, Turkey, are investigated to test the hypothesis of geographic speciation driven by early Pliocene orogenic events in spite of morphological similarity. We use 3434 aligned base pairs of mitochondrial DNA from 42 samples representing 36 populations of three species and six outgroup species to test this hypothesi...

Journal: :Current Biology 2016
Ayça Omrak Torsten Günther Cristina Valdiosera Emma M. Svensson Helena Malmström Henrike Kiesewetter William Aylward Jan Storå Mattias Jakobsson Anders Götherström

Anatolia and the Near East have long been recognized as the epicenter of the Neolithic expansion through archaeological evidence. Recent archaeogenetic studies on Neolithic European human remains have shown that the Neolithic expansion in Europe was driven westward and northward by migration from a supposed Near Eastern origin [1-5]. However, this expansion and the establishment of numerous cul...

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