William E. Triest
Marshall University
20 Papers
279 Citations
William E. Triest is an academic researcher from Marshall University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Helicobacter pylori. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 20 publications. Previous affiliations of William E. Triest include Albert Einstein College of Medicine & Wayne State University.
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Papers
Angiogenesis in malignancies of the female genital tract.
Ovadia Abulafia,Ovadia Abulafia,Ovadia Abulafia,William E. Triest,William E. Triest,William E. Triest,David M. Sherer,David M. Sherer,David M. Sherer +8 more
TL;DR: Preliminary data indicate angiogenesis may serve as a prognostic indicator in vulvar and cervical squamous cell carcinomas and endometrial and ovarian adenocarcinomas and these findings may lead to future application of therapeutic trials with antiangiogenic factors.
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Angiogenesis in endometrial hyperplasia and stage I endometrial carcinoma.
Ovadia Abulafia,Ovadia Abulafia,William E. Triest,William E. Triest,David M. Sherer,David M. Sherer,Christine C. Hansen,Christine C. Hansen,Fabio Ghezzi,Fabio Ghezzi +9 more
TL;DR: In stage I endometrial carcinoma, greater depth of invasion and higher tumor grade are directly correlated with angiogenic intensity, and complex endometial hyperplasia and endometrian carcinoma areAngiogenic.
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•Journal Article
Age-Associated Changes in Hearts of Male Fischer 344/Brown Norway F1 Rats
Ernest M. Walker,Michael S. Nillas,Elsa I. Mangiarua,Sylvestre Cansino,Ryan G. Morrison,Romaine R. Perdue,William E. Triest,Gary L. Wright,Mark Studeny,Paulette S. Wehner,Kevin M. Rice,Eric R. Blough +11 more
TL;DR: Male F344/BN F1 rats demonstrated progressive age-related decline in cardiac function, LV structural changes (chamber dimensions, volumes, and wall thicknesses), and persistent arrhythmias, consistent with those in humans.
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Iron-Induced Cardiac Damage: Role of Apoptosis and Deferasirox Intervention
Yeling Wang,Miaozong Wu,Rabaa M. Al-Rousan,Hua Liu,Jacqueline Fannin,Satyanarayana Paturi,Ravi Kumar Arvapalli,Anjaiah Katta,Sunil K. Kakarla,Kevin M. Rice,William E. Triest,Eric R. Blough +11 more
TL;DR: The administration of deferasirox, a tridentate iron chelator, is associated with diminished tissue iron deposition, attenuated activation of caspases, reduced α-fodrin cleavage, improved membrane integrity, decreased TUNEL reactivity, and attenuated cardiac fibrosis, which suggest that the activated caspase-dependent signaling may play a role in the development of iron-induced cardiac apoptosis and fibrosis.
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Angiogenesis in squamous cell carcinoma in situ and microinvasive carcinoma of the uterine cervix
TL;DR: Microinvasive squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix is angiogenic, but depth of invasion is not associated with increased angiogenicity.
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