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Oncogenes and Chromosomal Aberrations
1986The first chromosomal aberration associated with cancer was reported in 1960 by Nowell and Hungerford [1]. A small deleted chromosome called Philadelphia chromosome or Ph1 was consistently found in leukaemic cells of patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML).
A. Hagemeijer, D. Bootsma
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Recurrent chromosome aberrations in cancer
Mutation Research/Reviews in Mutation Research, 2000Cytogenetic investigations of neoplastic cells during the past 25 years have revealed more than 600 acquired, recurrent, balanced chromosome rearrangements, and it has been established that every tumor type, studied in a sufficient number to permit conclusions, may be subdivided on the basis of specific, and even pathognomonic, abnormalities.
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CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS IN MALNUTRITION
The Lancet, 1973G. Sadasivan, T.C. Raghuram
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CHROMOSOME ABERRATIONS AND METRONIDAZOLE
The Lancet, 1976Felix Mitelman+2 more
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DRUG‐INDUCED CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1968Maimon M. Cohen, Kurt Hirschhorn
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On the fate of stable chromosomal aberrations☆
Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1975J. L. Minkler+2 more
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