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A Twist on Pulmonary Vascular Remodeling: Endothelial to Mesenchymal Transition?

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Disconnect between Fibrotic Response and Right Ventricular Dysfunction

artículo científico publicado en 2019

Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)-induced heme oxygenase-1 attenuates cytotoxic effects of DHA in vascular smooth muscle cells

artículo científico publicado en 2013

Docosahexaenoic acid-induced unfolded protein response, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis in vascular smooth muscle cells are triggered by Ca²⁺-dependent induction of oxidative stress

artículo científico publicado en 2012

Functional and molecular factors associated with TAPSE in hypoxic pulmonary hypertension

artículo científico publicado en 2016

High-mobility group box-1 induces vascular remodelling processes via c-Jun activation

artículo científico publicado en 2015

IL-1 receptor blockade skews inflammation towards Th2 in a mouse model of systemic sclerosis

scientific article published on 29 September 2019

NPY/Y₁ receptor-mediated vasoconstrictory and proliferative effects in pulmonary hypertension

artículo científico publicado en 2014

Origin of neomuscularized vessels in mice exposed to chronic hypoxia.

artículo científico publicado en 2011

PDGFRα and αSMA mark two distinct mesenchymal cell populations involved in parenchymal and vascular remodeling in pulmonary fibrosis

artículo científico publicado en 2020

Pressure Overload Creates Right Ventricular Diastolic Dysfunction in a Mouse Model: Assessment by Echocardiography

artículo científico publicado en 2015

Resident cell lineages are preserved in pulmonary vascular remodeling

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Right ventricular fibrosis and dysfunction: Actual concepts and common misconceptions.

artículo científico publicado en 2018

Single-cell transcriptomics reveals skewed cellular communication and phenotypic shift in pulmonary artery remodeling

artículo científico publicado en 2022

Two-Way Conversion between Lipogenic and Myogenic Fibroblastic Phenotypes Marks the Progression and Resolution of Lung Fibrosis

scientific article published on 01 April 2017

Two-Way Conversion between Lipogenic and Myogenic Fibroblastic Phenotypes Marks the Progression and Resolution of Lung Fibrosis.

artículo científico publicado en 2016