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"TENAYA"
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Angiopoietins as Potential Targets in Management of Retinal Disease
by
Eichenbaum, David A
,
Aziz, Aamir A
,
Russell, Matthew W
in
Ang/Tie
,
Angiogenesis
,
Blood circulation disorders
2021
The Ang/Tie2 pathway complements VEGF-mediated activity in retinal vascular diseases such as DME, AMD, and RVO by decreasing vascular integrity, increasing neovascularization, and increasing inflammatory signaling. Faricimab is a bispecific antibody that has been developed as an inhibitor of both VEGF and Ang2 that has shown positive results in phase I, II and III trials. Recent Year 1 data from phase III clinical trials YOSEMITE, RHINE, TENAYA, and LUCERNE have confirmed the efficacy, safety, durability, and superiority of faricimab in patients with DME and nAMD. Faricimab, if approved, may significantly decrease treatment burden in patients with retinal vascular diseases to a greater extent than would current standard of care anti-VEGF injections.
Journal Article
INDIAN ARTIST FINDS DIRECTION WITH HELP FROM AN EAGLE
When Albert Tenaya was a young boy in San Jose, he longed to be Mexican because that seemed normal. He had black hair and brown skin like his Latino pals, but knew he was different -- he was Indian. According to lore, Tenaya is one of the few descendents of the Yosemite Valley Indian Chief Tanaya from the Bear Clan tribe. According to Tenaya, his grandmother was fluent in many languages, including Russian, French, English, Miwok and her own Indian dialect. She was able to communicate well and tell the family stories.
Newspaper Article
Youth on stage
2007
A variety concert celebrating Waikato youth will be held at Waikato University's Academy of Performing Arts on April 19.
Newspaper Article
Ocean investigators set their sights on Pacific Ocean 'blob'
2015
Volunteers from The Marine Mammal Center release California sea lions at Chimney Rock in Point Reyes National Seashore in 2014. Researchers say the phenomenon of the so-called 'ocean blob' of unusually warm Pacific Ocean water is causing a decrease in the food available to the pups' mothers, and increasingly, they are abandoning their offspring because they can't feed them.Credit Conner Jay The Marine Mammal Center; Sea lion pup Percevero (center) is one of more than 200 patients at The Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, California. Researchers say the phenomenon of the so-called 'ocean blob' of unusually warm Pacific Ocean water is causing a decrease in the food available to the pups' mothers, and increasingly, they are abandoning their offspring because they can't feed them. Credit The Marine Mammal Center; A California sea lion pup recovers at The Marine Mammal Center. Researchers say the phenomenon of the so-called 'ocean blob' of unusually warm Pacific Ocean water is causing a decrease in the food available to the pups' mothers, and increasingly, they are abandoning their offspring because they can't feed them. Credit Pat Wilson The Marine Mammal Center
Newspaper Article
CSD girls come up short again
2005
In that fifth game, Chinese Christian jumped to a 3-0 lead before Tenaya Herbold had three kills and a block to give CSD a 5-4 lead. Herbold had a big game for the Eagles, finishing with 12 kills and eight digs. CSD answered by taking a quick 7-1 lead en route to a 25-18 win in the third game. On one play, Herbold had a nice dig that ended up landing just inside the back line for a winner to make it 14-5 CSD. Prader had five kills, two aces and two digs while Blair Rasmus had 14 assists and three digs for CSD.
Newspaper Article
FIRST EDITIONS ; TWO MADISON WRITERS ARE CELEBRATING THE PUBLICATION OF THEIR DEBUT NOVELS.; TENAYA DARLINGTON
While the novel followed her like a shadow from 1995 to 2000, [TENAYA DARLINGTON] earned a master's degree in fine arts at Indiana University, got married, spent one year at Beloit College as a poetry fellow and became one of Madison's most popular left-of- center writers. As features editor of Madison alternative weekly Isthmus in recent years, Darlington, now 32, has dug her nails into Madison lifestyle and grabbed notice as a renegade voice of Gens X and Y. Near the end of graduate school in 1997, Darlington and [Carl Johns] married and later moved to Madison, where she had visited while attending Beloit College. The couple planned to teach English in Japan after marrying when Darlington received the poetry fellowship at Beloit and they settled in Madison. Two years later, Darlington was a winner in the National Poetry Series, which published her book of poems called \"Madame Deluxe,\" inspired by watching drag queen shows.
Newspaper Article