Significance of PCa
PCa, or prostate cancer, is a significant focus of this text. It is a disease primarily affecting men over 50, presenting opportunities for interventions like dietary supplements. The study also investigates PCa as an abbreviation for prostate cancer, comparing patients with this condition to those with BPH. Additionally, PCa is mentioned in the context of patient-controlled analgesia for postoperative pain management.
Synonyms: Prostate cancer
The below excerpts are indicatory and do represent direct quotations or translations. It is your responsibility to fact check each reference.
The concept of PCa in scientific sources
PCa is used as an abbreviation for prostate cancer, a disease primarily affecting men over 50. Research explores interventions like dietary supplements. Protocatechuic acid, with potential as a drug candidate, is also investigated. The study compares patients with PCa to those with BPH.
From: Sustainability Journal (MDPI)
(1) According to PCA, our analyses indicated that only 7 room attributes (Length, Depth, Volume, TAoW, Tvis, SR, and WFR) out of 13 input attributes can predict the internal change to about 97.7%.[1] (2) It is a statistical method used to identify the primary sources of PTEs in groundwater based on eigenvalues and cumulative contribution rates.[2] (3) It is also known as particles (pores) and crack analysis system, was employed for the quantitative microscopic image analysis.[3] (4) A statistical technique for dimensionality reduction, utilized to analyze the suitability of 4 IR technologies and the benefits of integrating these technologies for the construction industry.[4] (5) PCA, or Principal Component Analysis, is used to transform images from all bands to RGB images, retaining most information and often finding the best features for analysis.[5]
From: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (MDPI)
(1) is a statistical procedure that uses orthogonal transformation to convert a set of observations of possibly correlated variables into a set of values of linearly uncorrelated variables.[6] (2) It is a technique effective for developing new input variable sets to supplement low-dimensional input data for demolition waste generation rate prediction.[7] (3) PCA, or principal component analysis, is a feature extraction method used for comparison with the proposed autoencoder-based method to validate its superiority in epilepsy detection.[8] (4) PCA, or Principal Component Analysis, is a method used in the analysis of pollutant sources to extract components and explain the total variance in the data.[9] (5) It is applied to reduce the dimension of the raw data by eliminating overlapping information and then classify the influencing factors.[10]
From: International Journal of Pharmacology
(1) This was performed on specimens from the above dataset using R 3.6.3 software and drawn by ggplot2 3.3.3 package to observe the distribution between groups.[11] (2) It is an abbreviation for Principal Components Analysis, a method commonly used to evaluate the quality of TCM and analyze the chemical differences among different samples.[12] (3) This is adopted and performed using SIMCA-P 14.1 MVA software and used for analysis of HPLC chromatograms of Galla Chinensis and Galla Turcica.[13] (4) PCA possesses three hydrogen-bond donors and four hydrogen-bond acceptors, a molecular weight of 154.1, and a calculated Log P of 0.903, suggesting its potential as a drug candidate.[14] (5) Protocatechuic acid, a compound evaluated for its role as an MAO-B inhibitor in treating Alzheimer's disease, with potential actions beyond antioxidants.[15]
From: Asian Journal of Pharmaceutics
(1) EGC-3-gallate is incorporated with polymeric NPs such as PLGA-PEG-A to target this.[16] (2) In this method, the drug solution is atomized into a chamber containing compressed CO2.[17] (3) An abbreviation for principal component analysis which provides best possible SMEDDS formulations.[18]
From: The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
(1) Prostate cancer, which is a disease of men over 50, and whose development offers opportunities for interventions, such as dietary supplements.[19] (2) PCa is an abbreviation for prostate cancer, a condition investigated in this study, and patients with this condition are compared to those with BPH.[20]
From: Journal of Public Health in Africa
(1) PCA is a statistical technique for data reduction, reducing the number of variables in an analysis by describing linear combinations of variables that contain most of the information.[21]
From: Journal of Medicinal Plants for Economic Development
(1) This is a statistical method used to analyze and interpret complex data, in this case, to identify patterns and relationships in the plant's chemical composition.[22]
From: South African Family Practice
(1) This is a patient-controlled analgesia system that is superior in managing postoperative pain, especially in the ward setting after the patient has left the operating room.[23]