Results 311 to 320 of about 358,347 (340)
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Biocompatibility: Bioengineering aspects

Bio-Medical Materials and Engineering, 1986
Abstract: Bioengineers have contributed to biocompatibility research. Many materials have been designed, synthesized, and characterized by use of various analytical instruments. The blood compatibility of materials has been studied by focusing on the blood‐material interfacial reactions.
Yukihiko Nosé, Shun Murabayashi
openaire   +5 more sources

Cytokines and Biocompatibility

Blood Purification, 1990
Issues in biocompatibility have traditionally focused on the interaction of membranes or materials with the activation of complement, red blood cell destruction, clotting dysfunctions, and platelet activation. Other studies are concerned with the replacement fluid formulations and host responses.
openaire   +3 more sources

Dendrimer biocompatibility and toxicity

Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews, 2005
The field of biomedical dendrimers is still in its infancy, but the explosion of interest in dendrimers and dendronised polymers as inherently active therapeutic agents, as vectors for targeted delivery of drugs, peptides and oligonucleotides, and as permeability enhancers able to promote oral and transdermal drug delivery makes it timely to review ...
Lorella Izzo, Lorella Izzo, Ruth Duncan
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On the mechanisms of biocompatibility

Biomaterials, 2008
The manner in which a mutually acceptable co-existence of biomaterials and tissues is developed and sustained has been the focus of attention in biomaterials science for many years, and forms the foundation of the subject of biocompatibility. There are many ways in which materials and tissues can be brought into contact such that this co-existence may ...
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Biocompatibility of Hemodiafilters

2016
Biocompatibility and the efficiency of solute removal are important considerations in blood purification therapy. Improvement of biocompatibility is expected to lead to the prevention of dialysis-related complications (e.g. amyloidosis, arteriosclerosis, and malnutrition) and to the delay of disease progression by alleviating microinflammation.The ...
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Biocompatibility of Porous Silicon

2014
The biocompatibility of porous silicon is critical to its potential biomedical uses, both in vivo within the human body for therapy and diagnostics, and in vitro for biosensing and biofiltration. Published data from cell culture and in vivo studies are reviewed, and a number of emerging applications for bioactive or biodegradable silicon are discussed.
Nicolas H. Voelcker, Suet P. Low
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Evaluation of Biocompatible Materials

Biomaterials, Medical Devices, and Artificial Organs, 1973
An analytical summary is presented on the available major in vivo and in vitro evaluations of selected blood and tissue compatible materials.
Sheldon Rabin   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

A Luminescent and Biocompatible PhotoCORM

Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2012
The water-soluble rhenium(I) complex fac-[Re(bpy)(CO)(3)(thp)](+) (1) [CF(3)SO(3)(-) salt; bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine, thp = tris(hydroxymethyl)phosphine] is both strongly luminescent and photoactive toward carbon monoxide release. It is stable in aerated aqueous media, is incorporated into cells from the human prostatic carcinoma cell line PPC-1, and shows
Alessia Pallaoro   +3 more
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Biocompatibility in transfusion medicine

Transfusion Science, 1996
The first measurable event upon interaction of artificial surfaces with blood is adsorption of proteins within seconds or minutes. At a later stage, blood cells interact with the surfaces through the initially deposited protein layer. The chemical composition of the surface is only one criterion for differential deposition of various plasma proteins ...
Robert Rieben   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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