Results 271 to 280 of about 484,803 (308)
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Journal of Refractive Surgery, 1991
ABSTRACT: Corneal allograft rejection remains the major impediment to the success of the most commonly performed solid tissue transplant. Immunologic mechanisms, particularly cellular immunity, appear to be responsible for the majority of cases of graft failure.
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ABSTRACT: Corneal allograft rejection remains the major impediment to the success of the most commonly performed solid tissue transplant. Immunologic mechanisms, particularly cellular immunity, appear to be responsible for the majority of cases of graft failure.
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Current Protocols in Immunology, 1992
AbstractSkin allograft rejection is a test of the competence of T lymphocytes to mediate in vivo tissue destruction, which in turn reflects their role in critical functions such as anti‐viral and tumor immunity. The tail‐skin graft procedure described here is useful predominantly because of the ease of preparation and resistance to ischemic ...
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AbstractSkin allograft rejection is a test of the competence of T lymphocytes to mediate in vivo tissue destruction, which in turn reflects their role in critical functions such as anti‐viral and tumor immunity. The tail‐skin graft procedure described here is useful predominantly because of the ease of preparation and resistance to ischemic ...
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Radionuclide diagnosis of allograft rejection
Seminars in Nuclear Medicine, 1982Interaction with one or more anatomical and physiopathological characteristics of the rejecting renal allograft is suggested by those radioagents utilized specifically for the diagnosis of allograft rejection. Rejection, the most common cause of declining allograft function, is frequently mimicked clinically or masked by other immediate or long term ...
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Chemokines in islet allograft rejection
Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews, 2003AbstractChemokines have emerged as important regulators in the development, differentiation, and anatomic distribution of leukocytes. Studies of renal and cardiac allograft biopsies have revealed that the expression of many chemokine receptors and their ligands was associated with acute allograft rejection.
Reza, Abdi +2 more
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Early Severe Renal Allograft Rejection
Archives of Surgery, 1976An early, severe form of renal allograft rejection, occuring after an initial day or more of good function and within the first week after transplantation, is an increasingly recognized phenomenon. This type of rejection occurred in 17 of 187 (9%) postmortem-donor renal transplants.
T V, Berne +2 more
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2001
Preface. Section I: Immunopathology of Cardiac Allograft Rejection. 1. Histocompatibility Antigens and Transplant Rejection S. Pillai. 2. Cellular and Humoral Rejection after Cardiac Transplantation M.L. Rose, et al. 3. Immunobiology of Chronic Cardiac Allograft Rejection P. Koskinen, et al. 4.
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Preface. Section I: Immunopathology of Cardiac Allograft Rejection. 1. Histocompatibility Antigens and Transplant Rejection S. Pillai. 2. Cellular and Humoral Rejection after Cardiac Transplantation M.L. Rose, et al. 3. Immunobiology of Chronic Cardiac Allograft Rejection P. Koskinen, et al. 4.
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Eicosanoids and Renal Allograft Rejection
Nephron, 1995The role of eicosanoids as mediators of inflammation in the course of renal allograft rejection is reviewed. Elucidation of their particular roles has come from the use of specific inhibitors, and one looks forward to their application in human transplant management.
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