Results 241 to 250 of about 29,190 (280)
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COLD AGGLUTININS IN PNEUMONIA

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1969
Excerpt To the Editor:In his article entitled "Rapid Screening for Cold Agglutinins in Pneumonia" (Ann. Intern. Med. 70: 701, 1969) Dr.
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Cold agglutinins

Anaesthesia, 1980
SummaryAn unusual case of re‐exploration of the site of previous ventricular aneurysmectomy is reported. The conduct of cardiopulmonary bypass was complicated by the presence of cold agglutinins with a wide thermal range active up to 30°C. There follows a brief description of cold agglutinins, and the difficulties they cause during cross‐matching.
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Heating up cold agglutinins

Blood, 2010
In this issue of Blood, Berentsen and coworkers describe a high response rate which is durable in some patients who receive combination fludarabine and rituximab for chronic cold agglutinin disease (CAD). If confirmed, this is a significant advance in therapy for a frequently difficult clinical problem.
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Microtitration of Serum Cold Agglutinins

Transfusion, 1970
In titration of serum cold agglutinins the microliter system was accurate when titration values did not exceed 1: 256. Beyond these dilutions this technic gave falsely high values. The approximate true level of high‐titer antibodies could be determined by reference to a correction calibration curve and a more accurate determination could be made by ...
Ten Feizi, E. Monger
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Lambda Chains in Cold Agglutinins

Science, 1967
Type L light chains have been found in the cold agglutinins in the serums of three patients with chronic hemolytic anemia. Although two of these cold agglutinins are unusual in that they do not have specificity to I or i red-cell antigens (one of these has, in addition, cryoglobulin property), the third is a cold agglutinin of I specificity. Previously
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Nature of Cold Agglutinin Linkage

Nature, 1953
IF sera containing auto-agglutinins (‘non-specific cold agglutinins’) are repeatedly absorbed in the cold with O cells, one of three results may be obtained: (1) activity against A and B cells may cease; this is the only result reported by numerous earlier workers; (2) activity against A and B cells may persist to a greater or lesser extent; subsequent
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Thermodynamics of the Cold Agglutinin Reaction

Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 1966
(1966). Thermodynamics of the Cold Agglutinin Reaction. Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation: Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 1-15.
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Cold agglutinin disease

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1979
Cold agglutinin disease is an autoimmune hemolytic anemia with varying causes. Two major types are recognized, with different clinical manifestations. Cold agglutinins are circulating antibodies capable of erythrocyte agglutination. However, the reaction is readily reversible. Treatment of the disease is variable. A case is presented to illustrate that
Carl E. Schow   +2 more
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Cold Agglutinin Syndrome

New England Journal of Medicine, 2023
Hiroko Fukushima, Megumi Matsumoto
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Cold Agglutinin Disease and Cryoglobulinemia

Clinical Lymphoma, 2005
Cold agglutinin disease is a form of direct, extravascular, antiglobulin-positive hemolysis. In vivo, immunoglobulin (Ig) M fixes complement molecules to the red cell membrane. Successive passages through the mononuclear phagocyte system result in loss of red cell membrane.
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