Results 121 to 130 of about 13,293,195 (181)
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Histocompatibility Testing for Keratoplasty in High-risk Patients
Ophthalmology, 1983Forty-eight consecutive patients at high risk for corneal graft rejection were transplanted with corneas from donors selected on the basis of a negative lymphocyte crossmatch, ABO blood group compatibility, and maximized HLA-A, -B matching. Graft survival in this study group was compared to a retrospective control group of 72 consecutive high-risk ...
Joseph A. Locascio+4 more
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Histocompatibility Testing for Highly Sensitized Transplant Candidates
Transplantation Proceedings, 2007AbstractChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF.
S. Saidman
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Histocompatibility Testing, 1967
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1969E. Witebsky
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Histocompatibility Testing for Xenotransplantation
2020Allotransplantation relied on two major advances in the field to overcome the host’s innate and adaptive immune system: sufficient immunosuppression and meticulous selection of donor-recipient pairs to increase the likelihood of organ survival. Given the field’s thorough evaluation and experimentation demonstrating that the clinically available, FDA ...
Gregory R. Martens, Joseph M. Ladowski
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Histocompatibility testing in intrafamilial renal transplantation
Urology, 1973The results of 25 intrafamilial renal allografts were compared with tissue typing and compatibility testing by the standard histocompatibility techniques of Amos, et al.1 The degree of consanguinity did not appear to matter in relation to rejection, since one half of sibling donors or parental-child donors did not elicit rejection.
Gerald P. Murphy+3 more
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Current Approaches to Histocompatibility Testing a Short Overview
Acta Clinica Belgica, 1997(1997). Current Approaches to Histocompatibility Testing a Short Overview. Acta Clinica Belgica: Vol. 52, No. 2, pp. 92-98.
Thomas Fieisher+2 more
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Methods of Histocompatibility Testing
1975Tissue and organ transplantation has two main aspects: surgical, concerned with the performance of technically successful transplants, and genetic, concerned with the inherited factors determining the fate of the transplants. Accordingly, this chapter is divided into two parts, each dealing with one of the two aspects.
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The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health, 2003
The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region on chromosome 6p21.3 is the most polymorphic in the human genome. It encodes hundreds of genes, of which the class I and class II HLA alleles play a central role in the generation of an immune response, but at the same time represent a barrier to marrow and organ transplantation.
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The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region on chromosome 6p21.3 is the most polymorphic in the human genome. It encodes hundreds of genes, of which the class I and class II HLA alleles play a central role in the generation of an immune response, but at the same time represent a barrier to marrow and organ transplantation.
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Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics Testing in the 21st Century
2016The scope of immunogenetics and histocompatibility testing in transplantation has changed dramatically over the past 50 years. In organ transplantation, outcomes continue to improve as a result of better immunogenetics testing, immune suppression, and patient management; however, acute rejection and chronic rejection remain the biggest obstacles for ...
Elaine F. Reed, Qiuheng Zhang
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