Results 171 to 180 of about 6,526 (229)

Spurious increase in automated optical platelet counts associated with lipemia in dogs. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Vet Diagn Invest
Fasoli S   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source

On the Nature of Cryoglobulins

The Journal of Immunology, 1968
Summary The cryoglobulins of two patients were studied. Each of the two cryoprecipitates consisted of two components. The first one, from the serum of a patient with “idiopathic cryoglobulinemia,” was composed of a 19 S and a 7 S component.
H H, Zinneman, D, Levi, U S, Seal
openaire   +2 more sources

The cryoglobulins: an overview

European Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2001
Cryoglobulins are cold‐precipitable immunoglobulins associated with a number of infectious, autoimmune and neoplastic disorders. Their appearance along with rheumatoid factor (RF) can be considered a normal event in the clearance of immune complexes and rarely produces any symptoms.
Dammacco F   +4 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Cryoglobulins and infectious diseases

La Ricerca in Clinica e in Laboratorio, 1986
The relationship between infectious diseases due to various pathogenetic factors and cryoglobulin production mechanisms has been investigated. Cryoglobulins have been evidenced in infections caused by very heterogeneous pathogens, i.e. leptospirosis, psittacosis, Mediterranean tick typhus, brucellosis, gram-negative bacterial septicemias, in which they
M. Galli   +7 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Cryoglobulins and Pyroglobulins

1978
A heterogeneous group of immunoglobulins (Ig’s), each member of which exhibits a temperature-dependent solubility abnormality, are known as cryoglobulins. A single Ig with the property of reversible cryoprecipitation is usually monoclonal. More frequently, two Ig’s combine by noncovalent bonds to form a mixed cryoglobulin, but when separated, neither ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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