La experiencia afectiva e inaudita del paisaje
artículo original  acceso abierto

La experiencia afectiva e inaudita del paisaje
artículo original  acceso abierto

Las narrativas del riesgo en la Patagonia chilena
"Lasia spinosa (L.) is used ethnobotanically for the treatment of various diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, inflammation of the lungs, bleeding cough, hemorrhoids, intestinal diseases, stomach pain, and uterine cancer. This review is aimed at summarizing phytochemistry and pharmacological data with their molecular mechanisms of action. A search was performed in databases such as PubMed, Science Direct, and Google Scholar using the keywords: ""Lasia spinosa,"" then combined with ""ethnopharmacological use,"" ""phytochemistry,"" and ""pharmacological activity."" This updated review included studies with in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo experiments with compounds of known concentration and highlighted pharmacological mechanisms. The research results showed that L. spinosa contains many important nutritional and phytochemical components such as alkanes, aldehydes, alkaloids, carotenoids, flavonoids, fatty acids, ketones, lignans, phenolics, terpenoids, steroids, and volatile oil with excellent bioactivity. The importance of this review lies in the fact that scientific pharmacological evidence supports the fact that the plant has antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, cytotoxic, antidiarrheal, antihelminthic, antidiabetic, antihyperlipidemic, and antinociceptive effects, while protecting the gastrointestinal system and reproductive. Regarding future toxicological and safety data, more research is needed, including studies on human subjects. In light of these data, L. spinosa can be considered a medicinal plant with effective bioactives for the adjuvant treatment of various diseases in humans."  

Lasia spinosa Chemical Composition and Therapeutic Potential: A Literature-Based Review
La Epidemia VIH en Tiempos de Pandemia: situación en Chile
Autores: Salinas-Onate, Natalia carta al editor acceso abierto
La Escuela de Leipzig o la justificación epistemológica del conservadurismo
Autores: Albarran, Juan Chavez artículo original
La estratificación socio-espacial en contexto indígena: el caso de Temuco, 1992-2002
Autores: Rojo Mendoza, Felix artículo original acceso abierto
La experiencia afectiva e inaudita del paisaje
La experiencia afectiva e inaudita del paisaje
Autores: Malet, Patricio Mena artículo original acceso abierto
La proteómica como herramienta en el desarrollo de una vacuna contra la toxocariasis
Autores: Manterola, Carlos carta al editor acceso abierto
La Relevancia Moral del Dolor de Animales de Experimentación y de Producción
Autores: Rojas, Mariana artículo original acceso abierto
Landscape of Genome-Wide DNA Methylation of Colorectal Cancer Metastasis
Autores: Brebi, Priscilla artículo original acceso abierto
LANGUAGE PLANNING FROM A SYSTEMIC SOCIOLOGY OF LANGUAGE: AN ANALYSIS ON THE CASES OF MAPUDUNGUN, SAMI AND MAORI
Autores: Cisternas Irarrazabal, Cesar artículo original acceso abierto
Las narrativas del riesgo en la Patagonia chilena
Autores: Vallejos-Romero, Arturo artículo original acceso abierto
Las objeciones de Gassendi a las Meditaciones metafísicas de Descartes en su contexto filosófico
Autores: Herrera-Balboa, Samuel artículo original acceso abierto
Las políticas de salud reproductiva en Estados Unidos y Chile
Autores: Raul Allard, S. artículo original acceso abierto
Lasia spinosa Chemical Composition and Therapeutic Potential: A Literature-Based Review
Autores: Cruz-Martins, Natalia "Lasia spinosa (L.) is used ethnobotanically for the treatment of various diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, inflammation of the lungs, bleeding cough, hemorrhoids, intestinal diseases, stomach pain, and uterine cancer. This review is aimed at summarizing phytochemistry and pharmacological data with their molecular mechanisms of action. A search was performed in databases such as PubMed, Science Direct, and Google Scholar using the keywords: ""Lasia spinosa,"" then combined with ""ethnopharmacological use,"" ""phytochemistry,"" and ""pharmacological activity."" This updated review included studies with in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo experiments with compounds of known concentration and highlighted pharmacological mechanisms. The research results showed that L. spinosa contains many important nutritional and phytochemical components such as alkanes, aldehydes, alkaloids, carotenoids, flavonoids, fatty acids, ketones, lignans, phenolics, terpenoids, steroids, and volatile oil with excellent bioactivity. The importance of this review lies in the fact that scientific pharmacological evidence supports the fact that the plant has antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, cytotoxic, antidiarrheal, antihelminthic, antidiabetic, antihyperlipidemic, and antinociceptive effects, while protecting the gastrointestinal system and reproductive. Regarding future toxicological and safety data, more research is needed, including studies on human subjects. In light of these data, L. spinosa can be considered a medicinal plant with effective bioactives for the adjuvant treatment of various diseases in humans."
Late Correction of Orbital Deformities Using Customized 3D Implant
Autores: Olate, Sergio artículo original acceso abierto
Learning Histology Through Game-Based Learning Supported by Mobile Technology
Autores: Rojas-Mancilla, Edgardo artículo original acceso abierto
Legal issues in digital oral health: a scoping review
Autores: Marino, Rodrigo J. artículo original
Lessons from a pilot program to induce stove replacements in Chile: design, implementation and evaluation
Autores: Gomez, Walter Chavez, Carlos Salgado, Hugo Vasquez, Felipe Artículo original acceso abierto
Lessons Learned From Direct Seeding to Restore Degraded Mountains in Cauca, Colombia
Autores: Lozano-Baez, Sergio Esteban artículo original