https://www.selleckchem.com/products/chir-99021-ct99021-hcl.html 001, p=0.02, and p=0.001, respectively), but there was no difference in nephrin/Cr and KIM-1/Cr between the two groups. Although, none of the patients had albuminuria, the median level of urine ACR was significantly higher in the patient group than the control group (p=0.003). The ACR was positively correlated with glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Urinary transferrin/Cr, AGT/Cr, and VEGF-A/Cr were significantly correlated with ACR, but not with either GFR or diabetic risk factors including HbA1c or disease duration. Normoalbuminuric and normotensive children and adolescents with T1D have elevated urinary VEGF, AGT and transferrin levels, which may indicate the development of DKD before albuminuria occurs. Normoalbuminuric and normotensive children and adolescents with T1D have elevated urinary VEGF, AGT and transferrin levels, which may indicate the development of DKD before albuminuria occurs.Understanding the impact routine research and laboratory procedures have on animals is crucial to improving their wellbeing and to the success and reproducibility of the research they are involved in. Cognitive measures of welfare offer insight into animals' internal psychological state, but require validation. Attention bias - the tendency to attend to one type of information over another - is a cognitive phenomenon documented in humans and animals that is known to be modulated by affective state (i.e., emotions). Hence, changes in attention bias may offer researchers a deeper perspective of their animals' psychological wellbeing. The dot-probe task is an established method for quantifying attention bias in humans (by measuring reaction time to a dot-probe replacing pairs of stimuli), but has yet to be validated in animals. We developed a dot-probe task for long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) to determine if the task can detect changes in attention bias following anesthesia, a context known to modulatole