全文获取类型
收费全文 | 375篇 |
免费 | 30篇 |
专业分类
儿科学 | 18篇 |
妇产科学 | 4篇 |
基础医学 | 43篇 |
口腔科学 | 20篇 |
临床医学 | 21篇 |
内科学 | 62篇 |
皮肤病学 | 66篇 |
神经病学 | 39篇 |
特种医学 | 21篇 |
外科学 | 44篇 |
综合类 | 4篇 |
预防医学 | 5篇 |
眼科学 | 5篇 |
药学 | 31篇 |
中国医学 | 3篇 |
肿瘤学 | 19篇 |
出版年
2023年 | 2篇 |
2022年 | 7篇 |
2021年 | 7篇 |
2020年 | 6篇 |
2019年 | 19篇 |
2018年 | 9篇 |
2017年 | 17篇 |
2016年 | 6篇 |
2015年 | 12篇 |
2014年 | 12篇 |
2013年 | 22篇 |
2012年 | 23篇 |
2011年 | 27篇 |
2010年 | 11篇 |
2009年 | 12篇 |
2008年 | 15篇 |
2007年 | 22篇 |
2006年 | 17篇 |
2005年 | 14篇 |
2004年 | 24篇 |
2003年 | 15篇 |
2002年 | 20篇 |
2001年 | 6篇 |
2000年 | 11篇 |
1999年 | 4篇 |
1998年 | 5篇 |
1997年 | 1篇 |
1996年 | 4篇 |
1995年 | 3篇 |
1993年 | 1篇 |
1992年 | 5篇 |
1991年 | 7篇 |
1990年 | 11篇 |
1989年 | 5篇 |
1988年 | 6篇 |
1987年 | 5篇 |
1986年 | 1篇 |
1985年 | 2篇 |
1984年 | 2篇 |
1983年 | 1篇 |
1982年 | 1篇 |
1980年 | 3篇 |
1979年 | 2篇 |
排序方式: 共有405条查询结果,搜索用时 171 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Chandrashekar HB Ramesh BR Chitra D 《The Indian journal of chest diseases & allied sciences》1996,38(1):45-48
We report a case of chronic berylliosis of the lung in a patient who was exposed to copper beryllium alloy, which was mistaken and being treated as miliary tuberculosis. The relevant literature is reviewed. 相似文献
6.
S. Sunil Kumar Nagaraj Desai D. Narayanappa C. Chandrashekar 《Indian heart journal》2014,66(6):743-744
2D echocardiography was performed on a 4-year-old child suffering from right thigh abscess due to MRSA infection following diagnosis of pericardial effusion by USG abdomen. It revealed myocardial abscess and pericardial effusion. This child underwent series of 2D echocardiographic studies which showed image appearance of myocardial abscess with its time course of healing. 相似文献
7.
Tara S.?H. Beattie Harnalli L. Mohan Parinita Bhattacharjee Sudha Chandrashekar Shajy Isac Tisha Wheeler Ravi Prakash Banadakoppa M. Ramesh James F. Blanchard Lori Heise Peter Vickerman Stephen Moses Charlotte Watts 《American journal of public health》2014,104(8):1516-1525
Objectives. We examined the impact of community mobilization (CM) on the empowerment, risk behaviors, and prevalence of HIV and sexually transmitted infection in female sex workers (FSWs) in Karnataka, India.Methods. We conducted behavioral–biological surveys in 2008 and 2011 in 4 districts of Karnataka, India. We defined exposure to CM as low, medium (attended nongovernmental organization meeting or drop-in centre), or high (member of collective or peer group). We used regression analyses to explore whether exposure to CM was associated with the preceding outcomes. Pathway analyses explored the degree to which effects could be attributable to CM.Results. By the final survey, FSWs with high CM exposure were more likely to have been tested for HIV (adjusted odd ratio [AOR] = 25.13; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 13.07, 48.34) and to have used a condom at last sex with occasional clients (AOR = 4.74; 95% CI = 2.17, 10.37), repeat clients (AOR = 4.29; 95% CI = 2.24, 8.20), and regular partners (AOR = 2.80; 95% CI = 1.43, 5.45) than FSWs with low CM exposure. They were also less likely to be infected with gonorrhea or chlamydia (AOR = 0.53; 95% CI = 0.31, 0.87). Pathway analyses suggested CM acted above and beyond peer education; reduction in gonorrhea or chlamydia was attributable to CM.Conclusions. CM is a central part of HIV prevention programming among FSWs, empowering them to better negotiate condom use and access services, as well as address other concerns in their lives.HIV prevention strategies with female sex workers (FSWs) have traditionally relied on individual behavior change, involving peer educators, condom promotion, and provision of sexual health services.1,2 Over the past decade, there has been a growing recognition that HIV epidemics are “socially and culturally produced,”3 and that psychosocial and community-level processes underlie an individual’s ability to adopt safer sexual behaviors. This has influenced approaches to HIV prevention, with more attention being paid to structural and social factors (such as violence, stigma, and poverty) that shape individual-level risk behaviors (e.g., condom use) and interventions that are targeted toward contextual factors in the HIV risk environment.4–8Among FSW populations, community mobilization (CM) has been endorsed as one of the structural interventions that improve the risk environment, with it''s effectiveness in addressing health and social issues of poor and marginalized populations largely explained through “empowerment.”9–12 Such programs have been recognized in the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS investment framework, which includes CM as a critical enabler to core programs.13 In contrast to peer education, which usually involves peers meeting FSWs in the field, talking to them about the program, about difficulties they are facing in their lives, about the importance of condom use, and about the clinics and drop-in centers and other program activities, CM involves bringing together FSWs of various typologies who are scattered and hidden across rural areas and towns through mobilization, participation, and empowerment processes, to provide them with the space and the opportunity to act together, to fight injustices against them, and to campaign for their rights. Thus, whereas peer education can be a fairly “top down” approach, CM is designed to be an inclusive process that is initiated and sustained by the community to bring about the changes they desire (e.g., reduction in violence) through the process of empowerment. Empowerment can be defined as “the processes by which those who have been denied the ability to make choices (disempowered) acquire such an ability.”14(p437) Most empowerment approaches recognize a dynamic interplay between gaining internal skills and overcoming external barriers, often drawing upon a conceptual framework that distinguishes “power within” (for example, self-confidence or critical thinking skills that contribute to individual agency), “power to” (for example, the ability to make individual decisions that determine and demonstrate such agency), and “power with” (communal decisions, such as group solidarity or collective action, which acknowledge that positive change may often be effected by individuals working together, rather than alone).9,15,16 In the context of sex work, the principles of social solidarity and CM seek to shift the burden of safer sex negotiation from being solely that of an individual FSW to a concept that is collectively shared and owned by the SW community, by acknowledging the dynamics and inequalities between a FSW and her client and the owners, pimps, and madams of sex establishments where sex workers work.17The Sonagachi program in Kolkata in east India provided one of the first examples of a rights-based HIV prevention program for FSWs, focusing on the mobilization and empowerment of brothel-based sex workers, as well as engagement with power structures,12,18–20 with data suggesting that HIV prevalence remained much lower in this setting compared with FSWs elsewhere in India.19 More recently, a growing body of evidence has suggested that organizing FSWs into support groups and community-based organizations can help the community to collectively challenge factors contributing to their vulnerability, such as stigma, discrimination, poverty, housing instability, violence, and harassment.21–31 However, although studies have reported strong associations between CM and collective power, uptake of sexually transmitted infection (STI) services, and consistent condom use with clients,11,17,32–35 there remains a paucity of data examining the impact of CM on biological (HIV or STI) outcomes.India has an estimated 2.4 million people living with HIV.36 Karnataka state in south India has the fourth highest HIV prevalence in the country. HIV is predominantly transmitted heterosexually, with the prevalence of HIV previously exceeding 1% in the general population, and a prevalence of more than 30% among FSWs in some districts.37,38 Before 2003, there was little HIV prevention programming in Karnataka. The Karnataka Health Promotion Trust was established in 2003 as part of the India Avahan initiative, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation.39,40 The program aimed to slow the HIV epidemic by rapidly scaling up targeted HIV prevention programs, reaching more than 60 000 FSWs and 20 000 men who have sex with men and transgenders in 20 of the 30 districts in the state.Community mobilization and the empowerment of FSWs formed a core part of HIV prevention programming in Karnataka (Figure 1).21,29–31 The process of mobilization and empowerment was gradual, with later phases of the program building on previous phases, and each activity contributing to the mobilization of SWs. For example, in the early phase of the project, peer educators were recruited from the FSW community. FSWs were brought together, and safe drop-in centers were created to respond to FSWs’ need for somewhere safe to rest, dress up, and meet friends. The program organized events and meetings for FSWs together with clinical services in these drop-in centers. These services included the provision of the “gray pack,” which was supplied every 3 to 6 months for the periodic presumptive treatment of gonorrhea and Chlamydia (containing 1 g azithromycin and 400 mg cefixime). These drop-in centers, in turn, helped attract more SWs, which resulted in the centers becoming a space where FSWs could meet each other and share their experiences, which helped create a sense of solidarity. The program then worked to support and develop critical thinking among the FSW community, providing a forum where FSWs could discuss the difficulties in their lives and reflect on how they could work together to address the challenges they faced.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1—Community mobilization activities of Karnataka Health Promotion Trust: Karnataka, India, 2003–2014.Note. DIC = drop-in center; FSW = female sex worker; STI = sexually transmitted infection.In the intensive phases of the program (2006–2008), FSWs built on their sense of solidarity and started to undertake collective action, working with policymakers, the police, government officials, human rights lawyers, and the media to address issues of stigma, discrimination, violence, and social inequity.21,31 This, in turn, gave birth to collectivization and the formation of community-based institutions, such as peer groups or collectives. In the maintenance phase (2008–2013), FSW community-based organizations were formed to enable the process of handing over ownership of the Avahan program to FSWs and to the state government by 2013, which is now complete.41A detailed analysis of the impact of Avahan on HIV and risk behavior has been conducted, and suggests that the combination HIV program had a significant impact on HIV prevalence in Karnataka.42 However, a key policy debate, especially given current resource constraints, has been whether it is necessary to include CM, collectivization, and empowerment components in FSW HIV prevention programming, which can be costly and time-consuming. Therefore, we examined the impact of CM on HIV and STI prevalence, HIV risk behaviors, and collective and individual power among FSWs in Karnataka, using secondary analyses of data from 2 rounds of behavioral–biological surveys conducted with FSWs in 2008 and 2011. 相似文献
8.
Avinash Kumar Ekta Rathi Raghu Chandrashekar Hariharapura Suvarna G. Kini 《Medicinal research reviews》2020,40(5):2019-2048
An understanding of the pathology of cervical cancer (CC) mediated by E6/E7 oncoproteins of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) was developed by late 80's. But if we look at the present scenario, not a single drug could be developed to inhibit these oncoproteins and in turn, be used specifically for the treatment of CC. The readers are advised not to presume the “viability of E6 protein” as mentioned in the title relates to just druggability of E6. The viability aspect will cover almost everything a researcher should know to develop E6 inhibitors until the preclinical stage. Herein, we have analysed the achievements and shortcomings of the scientific community in the last four decades in targeting HPV E6 against CC. Role of all HPV proteins has been briefly described for better perspective with a little detailed discussion of the role of E6. We have reviewed the articles from 1985 onward, reporting in vitro inhibition of E6. Recently, many computational studies have reported potent E6 inhibitors and these have also been reviewed. Subsequently, a critical analysis has been reported to cover the in vitro assay protocols and in vivo models to develop E6 inhibitors. A paragraph has been devoted to the role of public policy to fight CC employing vaccines and whether the vaccine against HPV has quenched the zeal to develop drugs against it. The review concludes with the challenges and the way forward. 相似文献
9.
ObjectiveWe sought to determine the efficacy and safety of a topical under-eye serum (Melalumin™; Menarini India Pvt Ltd.) in patients with periorbital hyperpigmentation (POH).MethodsIn this prospective, open-label single-arm study, 90 patients aged 18 to 55 years with Grade I to IV pigmentary POH, were given the under-eye serum for three months. Follow-up visits were scheduled at one, two and three months from baseline. Effectiveness was evaluated by two independent dermatologists using a skin colorimeter (Dermacatch) and dermoscopy (FotoFinder Systems, Inc., Medical Imaging Systems; Columbia, Maryland), as well as global photographs and patient-reported satisfaction ratings (excellent, very good, good, not satisfied). Adverse events were recorded. The colorimeter values were evaluated using the paired T test and the single-mean T test was used for dermoscopy and global clinical photographs.ResultsOf the 90 patients included, 85 completed the study. Significant reductions in colorimeter values were noted in both melanin (from 708 to 621) and erythema (from 450 to 417) over three months (p<0.05). Mean improvement in dermoscopic assessment was 48.41 percent; Most (n=73/85; 85.88%) patients achieved >25-percent improvement; over one-third (n=31/85; 36.47%) showed >50-percent improvement. Global photographs improved by 49.47 percent; most (n=75/85; 88.24%) patients showed >25-percent improvement, over one-third (n=38/85; 44.71%) showed >50-percent improvement. Patient satisfaction levels were high (Excellent: 16 [18.82%]; Very good: 38 [44.71%]); Good: 26 [30.59%]; Not satisfied: 5 [5.88%]). No adverse events were noted.ConclusionThis study demonstrates safety and effectiveness of the studied under-eye serum in patients with pigmentary POH. In addition to clinical improvements noted by the investigators, significant improvements were also noted in colorimeter values, dermoscopy results, and global photographs. Patients exhibited high satisfaction levels with treatment outcomes. No safety concerns were noted. 相似文献
10.
A. Chandrashekar Sharada F. Emerson Solomon Pathirisseri Uma Devi Nayanabhirama Udupa K. Kaitheri Srinivasan 《Acta oncologica (Stockholm, Sweden)》1996,35(1):95-100
The antitumor and radiosensitizing effects of withaferin A (WA), a steroidal lactone from Withania somnifera, was studied on Ehrlich ascites carcinoma in vivo. The acute LD50(14) for WA in Swiss mice was ∼ 80 mg/kg. Twenty-four hours after i.p. inoculation of 106 tumor cells, WA was injected i.p. at different dose fractions (5 or 7.5 mg/kg × 8, 10 mg/kg × 5, 20 or 30 mg/kg × 2) with or without abdominal gamma irradiation (RT, 7.5 Gy) after the first drug dose. Increase in life span and tumor-free survival were studied up to 120 days. The drug inhibited tumor growth and increased survival, which was dependent on the WA dose per fraction rather than the total dose. Combination of RT with all the drug schedules increased tumor cure and tumor-free survival, the best effect seen after 2 fractions of 30 mg/kg each. In another experiment WA was given as 2 (40 mg/kg × 2), 3 (30 mg/ kg × 3) or 4 (20 mg/kg × 4) fractions at 5, 7 or 10 days after tumor inoculation with or without RT after the first drug dose. At 7 and 10 days after inoculation the drug was effective only at 40 mg/kg × 2, but with RT 30 mg/kg × 3 produced an equal effect (20% survival) on 7 day old tumors. 相似文献