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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.
Nonprofit academic medical center focused on integrated clinical practice, education, and research with three major campuses: Rochester, Minnesota; Jacksonville, Florida; and Phoenix/Scottsdale, Arizona. Practice specializes in treating difficult cases through tertiary care and destination medicine.
Proper citation: Mayo Clinic (RRID:SCR_011383) Copy
http://research.nhgri.nih.gov/CGD/
Manually curated database of all conditions with known genetic causes, focusing on medically significant genetic data with available interventions. Includes gene symbol, conditions, allelic conditions, inheritance, age in which interventions are indicated, clinical categorization, and general description of interventions/rationale. Contents are intended to describe types of interventions that might be considered. Includes only single gene alterations and does not include genetic associations or susceptibility factors related to more complex diseases.
Proper citation: Clinical Genomic Database (RRID:SCR_006427) Copy
European website providing information about orphan drugs and rare diseases. It contains content both for physicians and for patients. Reference portal for rare diseases and orphan drugs to help improve diagnosis, care and treatment of patients with rare diseases.
Proper citation: Orphanet (RRID:SCR_006628) Copy
The BNF aims to provide prescribers, pharmacists and other healthcare professionals with sound up-to-date information about the use of medicines. The BNF provides ready access to key information on the selection, prescribing, dispensing and administration of medicines. Medicines that are generally prescribed in the UK are covered and those considered less suitable for prescribing are clearly identified.
Proper citation: British National Formulary (RRID:SCR_008176) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE; REPLACED BY NEPHROSEQ; A growing database of publicly available renal gene expression profiles, a sophisticated analysis engine, and a powerful web application designed for data mining and visualization of gene expression. It provides unique access to datasets from the Personalized Molecular Nephrology Research Laboratory incorporating clinical data which is often difficult to collect from public sources and mouse data.
Proper citation: Nephromine (RRID:SCR_003813) Copy
Sciblogs brings together the best science bloggers in the country (New Zealand) on one website, creating a hub for scientific analysis and discussion and facilitating reader interaction. The website is for scientists who want to reach out to a general audience to explain their science and how it relates to society. Some Sciblog contributors spend most of their time in the lab or buried in research. Others are authors or entrepreneurs. All of them know what they are talking about and have an interest in engaging in discussion on the big science-related issues facing society. Over time more bloggers will be added to the Sciblogs roster. If you would like to inquire about hosting a blog on Sciblogs contact us. You can easily keep an eye on new Sciblogs posts by subscribing via RSS or email or by following our Twitter feed. Alternatively, there is a Facebook page as well as a Facebook group feel free to join in! Categories: * Science * Agriculture * Technology * Health and Medicine * Environment and Ecology * Science and Society
Proper citation: Sciblogs (RRID:SCR_005219) Copy
This database presents the entire DNA sequence of the first diploid genome sequence of a Han Chinese, a representative of Asian population. The genome, named as YH, represents the start of YanHuang Project, which aims to sequence 100 Chinese individuals in 3 years. It was assembled based on 3.3 billion reads (117.7Gbp raw data) generated by Illumina Genome Analyzer. In total of 102.9Gbp nucleotides were mapped onto the NCBI human reference genome (Build 36) by self-developed software SOAP (Short Oligonucleotide Alignment Program), and 3.07 million SNPs were identified. The personal genome data is illustrated in a MapView, which is powered by GBrowse. A new module was developed to browse large-scale short reads alignment. This module enabled users track detailed divergences between consensus and sequencing reads. In total of 53,643 HGMD recorders were used to screen YH SNPs to retrieve phenotype related information, to superficially explain the donor's genome. Blast service to align query sequences against YH genome consensus was also provided.
Proper citation: YanHuang Project (RRID:SCR_006077) Copy
https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu
Database of European clinical trials containing information on interventional clinical trials on medicines. The information available dates from 1 May 2004 when national medicine regulatory authorities began populating the EudraCT database, the application that is used by national medicine regulatory authorities to enter clinical trial data. The EU Clinical Trials Register website launched on 22 March 2011 enables users to search for information which has been included in the EudraCT database. Users are able to: * view the description of a phase II-IV adult clinical trial where the investigator sites are in European Union member states and the European Economic Area; * view the description of any pediatric clinical trial with investigator sites in the European Union and any trials which form part of a pediatric investigation plan (PIP) including those where the investigator sites are outside the European Union. * download up to 20 results (per request) in a text file (.txt). The details in the clinical trial description include: * the design of the trial; * the sponsor; * the investigational medicine (trade name or active substance identification); * the therapeutic areas; * the status (authorized, ongoing, complete).
Proper citation: EU Clinical Trials Register (RRID:SCR_005956) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/medgen/
A database of organized information related to human medical genetics, such as attributes of conditions with a genetic contribution.
Proper citation: MedGen (RRID:SCR_000111) Copy
The official compendium for the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System (ATC)-code descriptions. The Centre's main tasks are development and maintenance of the ATC/DDD system, including: * To classify drugs according to the ATC system. * Priority will be given to the classification of single substances, while combination products available internationally (i.e. important fixed combinations) will be dealt with as far as possible. * To establish DDDs for drugs which have been assigned an ATC code. * To review and revise as necessary the ATC classification system and DDDs. * To stimulate and influence the practical use of the ATC system by co-operating with researchers in the drug utilization field. Support: The WHO Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology was established in 1982. The Centre is situated in Oslo at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. The Centre is funded by the Norwegian government.
Proper citation: WHO Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology (RRID:SCR_000677) Copy
http://www.spinal-research.org/
Spinal Research committed to funding international research into cure for spinal cord paralysis. Charity that funds medical research for treating and curing spinal cord paralysis. Supports basic science, clinical research and funds PhD students. ISRT also hosts Annual Network Meetings.
Proper citation: Spinal Research (RRID:SCR_000701) Copy
http://www.ipha.ie/alist/ifpma-clinical-trials-portal.aspx
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 23,2022. IFPMA Clinical Trials Portal is brought to you by IFPMA on behalf of its Member Companies and Associations. IFPMA Clinical Trials Portal ensures: a free and easy-to-use interface for patients and health professionals alike to ongoing clinical trials, clinical trial results and complementary information on related issues; non-promotional and reliable information; industry's commitment to the transparency of clinical trials. * Search by Medical Condition and Drug Name * Language Interfaces (En, Es, Fr, De, Jp) * Glossary and Easy Explanation of Medical Expressions * Geographical Search
Proper citation: IFPMA Clinical Trials Portal (RRID:SCR_000791) Copy
http://epilepsy.uni-freiburg.de/database
A comprehensive database for human surface and intracranial EEG data that is suitable for a broad range of applications e.g. of time series analyses of brain activity. Currently, the EU database contains annotated EEG datasets from more than 200 patients with epilepsy, 50 of them with intracranial recordings with up to 122 channels. Each dataset provides EEG data for a continuous recording time of at least 96 hours (4 days) at a sample rate of up to 2500 Hz. Clinical patient information and MR imaging data supplement the EEG data. The total duration of EEG recordings included execeeds 30000 hours. The database is composed of different modalities: Binary files with EEG recording / MR imaging data and Relational database for supplementary meta data.
Proper citation: EPILEPSIE database (RRID:SCR_003179) Copy
http://fcon_1000.projects.nitrc.org/indi/retro/cobre.html
Data set of raw anatomical and functional MR data from 72 patients with Schizophrenia and 75 healthy controls (ages ranging from 18 to 65 in each group). All subjects were screened and excluded if they had: history of neurological disorder, history of mental retardation, history of severe head trauma with more than 5 minutes loss of consciousness, history of substance abuse or dependence within the last 12 months. Diagnostic information was collected using the Structured Clinical Interview used for DSM Disorders (SCID). A multi-echo MPRAGE (MEMPR) sequence was used with the following parameters: TR/TE/TI = 2530/(1.64, 3.5, 5.36, 7.22, 9.08)/900 ms, flip angle = 7��, FOV = 256x256 mm, Slab thickness = 176 mm, Matrix = 256x256x176, Voxel size =1x1x1 mm, Number of echos = 5, Pixel bandwidth =650 Hz, Total scan time = 6 min. With 5 echoes, the TR, TI and time to encode partitions for the MEMPR are similar to that of a conventional MPRAGE, resulting in similar GM/WM/CSF contrast. Rest data was collected with single-shot full k-space echo-planar imaging (EPI) with ramp sampling correction using the intercomissural line (AC-PC) as a reference (TR: 2 s, TE: 29 ms, matrix size: 64x64, 32 slices, voxel size: 3x3x4 mm3). Slice Acquisition Order: Rest scan - collected in the Axial plane - series ascending - multi slice mode - interleaved MPRAGE - collected in the Sag plane - series interleaved - multi slice mode - single shot The following data are released for every participant: * Resting fMRI * Anatomical MRI * Phenotypic data for every participant including: gender, age, handedness and diagnostic information.
Proper citation: COBRE (RRID:SCR_010482) Copy
http://mips.gsf.de/services/genomes/uwe25/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 15, 2013. This is the official database of the environmental chlamydia genome project. This resource provides access to finished sequence for Parachlamydia-related symbiont UWE25 and to a wide range of manual annotations, automatical analyses and derived datasets. Functional classification and description has been manually annotated according to the Annotation guidelines. Chlamydiae are the major cause of preventable blindness and sexually transmitted disease. Genome analysis of a chlamydia-related symbiont of free-living amoebae revealed that it is twice as large as any of the pathogenic chlamydiae and had few signs of recent lateral gene acquisition. We showed that about 700 million years ago the last common ancestor of pathogenic and symbiotic chlamydiae was already adapted to intracellular survival in early eukaryotes and contained many virulence factors found in modern pathogenic chlamydiae, including a type III secretion system. Ancient chlamydiae appear to be the originators of mechanisms for the exploitation of eukaryotic cells. Environmental chlamydiae have recently been recognized as obligate endosymbionts of free-living amoebae and have been implicated as potential human pathogens. Environmental chlamydiae form a deep branching evolutionary lineage within the medically important order Chlamydiales. Despite their high diversity and ubiquitous distribution in clinical and environmental samples only limited information about genetics and ecology of these microorganisms is available. The Parachlamydia-related Acanthamoeba symbiont UWE25 was therefore selected as representative environmental chlamydia strain for whole genome sequencing. Comparative genome analysis was performed using PEDANT and simap. Sponsors: The environmental chlamydia genome project was funded by the bmb+f (German Federal Ministry of Education and Research) and is part of the Competence Network PathoGenoMiK.
Proper citation: Protochlamydia amoebophila UWE25 (RRID:SCR_008222) Copy
http://dtp.nci.nih.gov/docs/3d_database/dis3d.html
The NCI DIS 3D database is a collection of 3D structures for over 400,000 drugs. The database is an extension of the NCI Drug Information System. The structural information stored in the DIS is only the connection table for each drug. The connection table is just a list of which atoms are connected and how they are connected. It is essentially a searcheable database of three-dimensional structures has been developed from the chemistry database of the NCI Drug Information System (DIS), a file of about 450,000 primarily organic compounds which have been tested by NCI for anticancer activity. The DIS database is very similar in size and content to the proprietary databases used in the pharmaceutical industry; its development began in the 1950s; and this history led to a number of problems in the generation of 3D structures. This information can be searched to find drugs that share similar patterns of connections, which can correlate with similar biological activity. But the cellular targets for drug action, as well as the drugs themselves, are 3 dimensional objects and advances in computer hardware and software have reached the point where they can be represented as such. In many cases the important points of interaction between a drug and its target can be represented by a 3D arrangement of a small number of atoms. Such a group of atoms is called a pharmacophore. The pharmacophore can be used to search 3D databases and drugs that match the pharmacophore could have similar biological activity, but have very different patterns of atomic connections. Having a diverse set of lead compounds increases the chances of finding an active compound with acceptable properties for clinical development. Sponsor: The ICBG are supported by the Cooperative Agreement mechanism, with funds from nine components of the NIH, the National Science Foundation, and the Foreign Agricultural Service of the USDA.
Proper citation: National Cancer Institute 3D Structure Database (RRID:SCR_008211) Copy
A database housing longitudinal relational research data from over 4,000 research subjects. The database includes the following types of data: physical and neurological exam findings, neurocognitive test scores, personal and family history of dementia, personal demographic genotypes (APOE, HLA), age at service evaluations, age at onset, age at death, clinical diagnosis, neuropathology diagnosis, tissue inventory information (when available), health status, medications, laboratory tests, and MRI data.
Proper citation: Layton Center Clinical Data Resources (RRID:SCR_008822) Copy
http://www.vaccineinjury.info/vaccine-damage-reports-2010.html
Database of case reports of adverse reactions to vaccinations. There are 806 reports (May 2013). If you would like to report a case, please go to report your own vaccine reaction. The user may search by keywords or sort by vaccine, country, age, outcome, gender and hospital admission.
Proper citation: Vaccine damage reports database (RRID:SCR_010740) Copy
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/disorder_index.htm
Reference disease data set of neurological diseases along with their definitions, etiology, treatment, prognosis, ongoing research, clinical trials information and publications. The Disorder Index includes synonyms and research topics. Navigation is by letter of the alphabet., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: NINDS Disorder Index (RRID:SCR_000433) Copy
http://fcon_1000.projects.nitrc.org/indi/pro/nyu.html
Datasets including a collection of scans from 49 psychiatrically evaluated neurotypical adults, ranging in age from 6 to 55 years old, with age, gender and intelligence quotient (IQ) information provided. Future releases will include more comprehensive phenotypic information, and child and adolescent datasets, as well as individuals from clinical populations. The following data are released for every participant: * At least one 6-minute resting state fMRI scan (R-fMRI) * * One high-resolution T1-weighted mprage, defaced to protect patient confidentiality * Two 64-direction diffusion tensor imaging scans * Demographic information (age, gender) and IQ-measures (Verbal, Performance, and Composite; Weschler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence - WASI) * Most participants have 2 R-fMRI scans, collected less than 1 hour apart in the same scanning session. Rest_1 is always collected first.
Proper citation: NYU Institute for Pediatric Neuroscience Sample (RRID:SCR_010458) Copy
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