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- BookNicola J. Curtin, Ricky A. Sharma, editors.Contents:
History of the discovery of poly (ADP-ribose)
Discovery of the PARP superfamily and focus on the lesser exhibited but not lesser talented members
The role of PARPs in DNA Strand Break Repair
TIPs: Tankyrase Interacting Proteins
PARP and Carcinogenesis
Multitasking roles for poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation in aging and longevity
Overview of PARP Inhibitor Design and Optimization
Structure Based Design of PARP Inhibitors
Preclinical chemosensitization by PARP inhibitors
Classification of PARP inhibitors based on PARP trapping and catalytic inhibition, and rationale for combinations with topoisomerase I inhibitors and alkylating agents
Radiosensitisation by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibition
The vasoactivity of PARP inhibitors
Synthetic lethality with Homologous Recombination Repair defects
Targeting tumour hypoxia with PARP Inhibitors: Contextual synthetic lethality
Other determinants of sensitivity
Synthetic sickness with molecularly targeted agents against the EGFR pathway
Disruption of DNA repair by cell cycle and transcriptional CDK inhibition
Resistance to PARP Inhibitors Mediated by Secondary BRCA1/2 Mutations
PARP inhibitor resistance
what is beyond BRCA1 or BRCA2 restoration
Introduction to PARPi clinical trials and future directions
Clinical trials investigating PARP inhibitors as single agents
Clinical trials of PARP inhibitors with chemotherapy
Combination of PARP inhibitors with clinical radiotherapy
Biomarkers for PARP Inhibitors.Digital Access Springer 2015 - ArticleAndenaes S.Acta Neurol Scand. 1979 Oct;60(4):260-3.The Babinski reflex and the CUT reflex were examined in 150 neurological patients and 20 controls. A positive CUT reflex occurred more frequently than a positive Babinski reflex in the patient material as a whole, and in different diagnostic groups. However, there was a low grade of correspondence between a positive CUT reflex and a positive Babinski reflex. There were many positive CUT reflexes in the group of normal persons. In a number of cases the examination of the CUT reflex was impossible because of lack of strength or incooperability. The study indicates that the CUT reflex and the Babinski reflex are not comparable phenomena.