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LINK . SPRINGER . COM {}

  1. Analyzed Page
  2. Matching Content Categories
  3. CMS
  4. Monthly Traffic Estimate
  5. How Does Link.springer.com Make Money
  6. Keywords
  7. Topics
  8. Questions
  9. Schema
  10. External Links
  11. Analytics And Tracking
  12. Libraries

We are analyzing https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/cc3992.

Title:
Reactive oxygen species: toxic molecules or spark of life? | Critical Care
Description:
Increases in reactive oxygen species (ROS) and tissue evidence of oxidative injury are common in patients with inflammatory processes or tissue injury. This has led to many clinical attempts to scavenge ROS and reduce oxidative injury. However, we live in an oxygen rich environment and ROS and their chemical reactions are part of the basic chemical processes of normal metabolism. Accordingly, organisms have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to control these reactive molecules. Recently, it has become increasingly evident that ROS also play a role in the regulation of many intracellular signaling pathways that are important for normal cell growth and inflammatory responses that are essential for host defense. Thus, simply trying to scavenge ROS is likely not possible and potentially harmful. The
Website Age:
28 years and 1 months (reg. 1997-05-29).

Matching Content Categories {πŸ“š}

  • Science
  • Health & Fitness
  • Education

Content Management System {πŸ“}

What CMS is link.springer.com built with?

Custom-built

No common CMS systems were detected on Link.springer.com, and no known web development framework was identified.

Traffic Estimate {πŸ“ˆ}

What is the average monthly size of link.springer.com audience?

🌠 Phenomenal Traffic: 5M - 10M visitors per month


Based on our best estimate, this website will receive around 5,000,019 visitors per month in the current month.
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How Does Link.springer.com Make Money? {πŸ’Έ}

We can't figure out the monetization strategy.

While profit motivates many websites, others exist to inspire, entertain, or provide valuable resources. Websites have a variety of goals. And this might be one of them. Link.springer.com might be cashing in, but we can't detect the method they're using.

Keywords {πŸ”}

google, scholar, pubmed, cas, article, ros, oxygen, reactive, cell, injury, oxidation, molecules, superoxide, physiol, species, oxidative, cells, oxidase, role, radical, production, electrons, function, patients, important, nacetylcysteine, care, normal, mechanisms, redox, nadph, vascular, biol, intracellular, signaling, electron, nitric, oxide, protein, central, glutathione, med, processes, regulation, reduced, antioxidant, radicals, peroxynitrite, formation, cysteine,

Topics {βœ’οΈ}

chronic granulomatous disease tnf-alpha-induced oxidant generation sarco/endoplasmic reticulum calcium reactive nitrogen species polyethylene glycol-superoxide dismutase n-acetylcysteine decreases measures n-acetylcysteine enhances recovery multi-organ system failure n-acetylcysteine versus placebo apoptosis signal-regulating kinase anti-oxidant mechanisms cu/zn isoform present arginine-depleted cells leading human manganese-superoxide dismutase superoxide-generating oxidase mox1 small g-protein rac nadh/nadph oxidase-derived irreversible protein cross-linking reactive oxygen species 'reactive oxygen species' glutathione disulfide/glutathione couple de gaudio ar authors’ original file peroxynitrite-mediated cellular injury acute lung injury lung lipid peroxidation signal transduction pathways privacy choices/manage cookies mccord jm lipid peroxides including lipid peroxidation related subjects article magder random destructive species smooth muscle growth p22phox-based nadh oxidase nitric oxide synthases killing invading microorganisms vascular smooth muscle intracellular signal transduction n-acetylcysteine reduces hepatic blood flow critical care tumour necrosis factor oxygen radical scavenger neutrophil chemotactic factor mixed disulfide prevents synthetic superoxide dismutase tumor suppressor pten central role

Questions {❓}

  • Reactive oxygen species: toxic molecules or spark of life?
  • Reactive oxygen species: toxic molecules or spark of life?

Schema {πŸ—ΊοΈ}

WebPage:
      mainEntity:
         headline:Reactive oxygen species: toxic molecules or spark of life?
         description:Increases in reactive oxygen species (ROS) and tissue evidence of oxidative injury are common in patients with inflammatory processes or tissue injury. This has led to many clinical attempts to scavenge ROS and reduce oxidative injury. However, we live in an oxygen rich environment and ROS and their chemical reactions are part of the basic chemical processes of normal metabolism. Accordingly, organisms have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to control these reactive molecules. Recently, it has become increasingly evident that ROS also play a role in the regulation of many intracellular signaling pathways that are important for normal cell growth and inflammatory responses that are essential for host defense. Thus, simply trying to scavenge ROS is likely not possible and potentially harmful. The 'normal' level of ROS will also likely vary in different tissues and even in different parts of cells. In this paper, the terminology and basic chemistry of reactive species are reviewed. Examples and mechanisms of tissue injury by ROS as well as their positive role as signaling molecules are discussed. Hopefully, a better understanding of the nature of ROS will lead to better planned therapeutic attempts to manipulate the concentrations of these important molecules. We need to regulate ROS, not eradicate them.
         datePublished:2006-02-03T00:00:00Z
         dateModified:2006-02-03T00:00:00Z
         pageStart:1
         pageEnd:8
         sameAs:https://doi.org/10.1186/cc3992
         keywords:
            Reactive Oxygen Species
            Nitric Oxide
            Chronic Granulomatous Disease
            Oxidative Injury
            Reactive Nitrogen Species
            Intensive / Critical Care Medicine
            Emergency Medicine
         image:
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            https://media.springernature.com/lw1200/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fcc3992/MediaObjects/13054_2006_Article_3873_Fig2_HTML.jpg
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         isPartOf:
            name:Critical Care
            issn:
               1364-8535
            volumeNumber:10
            type:
               Periodical
               PublicationVolume
         publisher:
            name:BioMed Central
            logo:
               url:https://www.springernature.com/app-sn/public/images/logo-springernature.png
               type:ImageObject
            type:Organization
         author:
               name:Sheldon Magder
               affiliation:
                     name:McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital
                     address:
                        name:Division of Critical Care, McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Canada
                        type:PostalAddress
                     type:Organization
               email:[email protected]
               type:Person
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         type:ScholarlyArticle
      context:https://schema.org
ScholarlyArticle:
      headline:Reactive oxygen species: toxic molecules or spark of life?
      description:Increases in reactive oxygen species (ROS) and tissue evidence of oxidative injury are common in patients with inflammatory processes or tissue injury. This has led to many clinical attempts to scavenge ROS and reduce oxidative injury. However, we live in an oxygen rich environment and ROS and their chemical reactions are part of the basic chemical processes of normal metabolism. Accordingly, organisms have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to control these reactive molecules. Recently, it has become increasingly evident that ROS also play a role in the regulation of many intracellular signaling pathways that are important for normal cell growth and inflammatory responses that are essential for host defense. Thus, simply trying to scavenge ROS is likely not possible and potentially harmful. The 'normal' level of ROS will also likely vary in different tissues and even in different parts of cells. In this paper, the terminology and basic chemistry of reactive species are reviewed. Examples and mechanisms of tissue injury by ROS as well as their positive role as signaling molecules are discussed. Hopefully, a better understanding of the nature of ROS will lead to better planned therapeutic attempts to manipulate the concentrations of these important molecules. We need to regulate ROS, not eradicate them.
      datePublished:2006-02-03T00:00:00Z
      dateModified:2006-02-03T00:00:00Z
      pageStart:1
      pageEnd:8
      sameAs:https://doi.org/10.1186/cc3992
      keywords:
         Reactive Oxygen Species
         Nitric Oxide
         Chronic Granulomatous Disease
         Oxidative Injury
         Reactive Nitrogen Species
         Intensive / Critical Care Medicine
         Emergency Medicine
      image:
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         https://media.springernature.com/lw1200/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fcc3992/MediaObjects/13054_2006_Article_3873_Fig2_HTML.jpg
         https://media.springernature.com/lw1200/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fcc3992/MediaObjects/13054_2006_Article_3873_Fig3_HTML.jpg
      isPartOf:
         name:Critical Care
         issn:
            1364-8535
         volumeNumber:10
         type:
            Periodical
            PublicationVolume
      publisher:
         name:BioMed Central
         logo:
            url:https://www.springernature.com/app-sn/public/images/logo-springernature.png
            type:ImageObject
         type:Organization
      author:
            name:Sheldon Magder
            affiliation:
                  name:McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital
                  address:
                     name:Division of Critical Care, McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Canada
                     type:PostalAddress
                  type:Organization
            email:[email protected]
            type:Person
      isAccessibleForFree:1
["Periodical","PublicationVolume"]:
      name:Critical Care
      issn:
         1364-8535
      volumeNumber:10
Organization:
      name:BioMed Central
      logo:
         url:https://www.springernature.com/app-sn/public/images/logo-springernature.png
         type:ImageObject
      name:McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital
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         name:Division of Critical Care, McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Canada
         type:PostalAddress
ImageObject:
      url:https://www.springernature.com/app-sn/public/images/logo-springernature.png
Person:
      name:Sheldon Magder
      affiliation:
            name:McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital
            address:
               name:Division of Critical Care, McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Canada
               type:PostalAddress
            type:Organization
      email:[email protected]
PostalAddress:
      name:Division of Critical Care, McGill University Health Centre, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Canada

External Links {πŸ”—}(244)

Analytics and Tracking {πŸ“Š}

  • Google Tag Manager

Libraries {πŸ“š}

  • Clipboard.js
  • Prism.js

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