نتایج جستجو برای: rhaponticum repens

تعداد نتایج: 1936  

2015
James D Adams Eric J Lien

Saw palmetto, Serenoa repens (Arecaceae), is a traditional medicine of American Indians of the southeast. The berries are used as medicine and as food. The leaves are used to make thatching, baskets, fans, brushes, brooms, rope, fire kindling, fish traps and dolls [1]. European immigrants to the Florida area learned from American Indians to use the berries as medicine. S. repens is the third mo...

Journal: :The Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2000
T Wilt A Ishani G Stark R MacDonald C Mulrow J Lau

OBJECTIVES This systematic review aimed to assess the effects of Serenoa repens in the treatment of Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH). SEARCH STRATEGY Trials were searched in computerized general and specialized databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Phytodok), by checking bibliographies, and by contacting manufacturers and researchers. SELECTION CRITERIA Trials were eligible if the...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2005
M López-Villavicencio J Enjalbert M E Hood J A Shykoff C Raquin T Giraud

The study of how parasites adapt to new hosts is of great importance for understanding the emergence of new diseases. Here, we report a study of the anther smut disease on Gypsophila repens (Caryophyllaceae). In contrast to what is usually found on other host species, infected natural populations of G. repens are extremely rare. Moreover, symptoms of diseased plants are incomplete and highly va...

Journal: :IMA fungus 2015
Janneke Aylward Léanne L Dreyer Emma T Steenkamp Michael J Wingfield Francois Roets

Two polyphyletic genera of ophiostomatoid fungi are symbionts of Proteaceae in southern Africa. One of these, Knoxdaviesia, includes two closely related species, K. proteae and K. capensis, that have overlapping geographical distributions, but are not known to share Protea host species. Knoxdaviesia capensis appears to be a generalist that occupies numerous hosts, but has never been found in P....

2017
Björn Ringselle Erik Bertholtz Ewa Magnuski Lars Olav Brandsæter Kjell Mangerud Göran Bergkvist

Tillage controls perennial weeds, such as Elymus repens, partly because it fragments their underground storage organs. However, tillage is difficult to combine with a growing crop, which limits its application. The aim of this study was to evaluate how soil vertical cutting with minimum soil disturbance and mowing affect the growth and competitive ability of E. repens in a grass-clover crop. A ...

Journal: :Journal of nematology 2004
Chris F Mercer S Wajid Hussain Kenyon K Moore

The predominant root-knot nematode in New Zealand pastures is Meloidogyne trifoliophila, and a recurrent selection program in Trifolium repens has developed resistance to this species. No data are available, however, on the mechanisms of resistance in T. repens or resistant genotypes of T. semipilosum. The development of M. trifoliophila in roots of T. repens and T. semipilosum was examined wee...

Journal: :Archives of ophthalmology 1998
J M Ruiz-Moreno F J Bornay-Llinares G Prieto Maza M Medrano F Simón M L Eberhard

Cases of zoonotic dirofilariasis infection, caused by Dirofilaria repens, occur widely throughout European, African, Middle Eastern, and Asian countries. The reports of this infection in humans in Spain are limited, and we herein report the case of a 43-year-old man from Elche (Alicante), Spain, who was seen with acute hyperemic reactivity of the temporal limbus of the right eye. A large nemato...

2014
Rupal Patel Suman Singh Samir Bhavsar

Dirofilariasis is a worldwide zoonotic filariasis with over 782 cases reported so far from different parts of the world. Human dirofilariasis, caused by Dirofilaria repens, have been reported to occur widely throughout Asia, Europe, and Africa. It has not been widely recognized in India, however; several cases have been reported in last few years. There is probably a focus of human infection wi...

2015
Tran Anh Le Thuat Thang Vi Khac Luc Nguyen Thanh Hoa Le

The emergence of Dirofilarial infections in Asia including Vietnam is a clinically significant threat to the community. We here report a rare case of subcutaneous Dirofilaria repens infection on the posterior thoracic wall in a young woman presenting a painful, itchy, and palpable nodule. The adult worm was identified by mitochondrial cox1 and nuclear ITS-2 sequence determination. The diagnosis...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید