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Mixed Leucocyte Cultures and Histocompatibility Testing
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Systematic pan-cancer analysis reveals the prognostic and immunological roles of ectonucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase 6. [PDF]
Wang G +11 more
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Preformed <i>vs de novo</i> anti-human leukocyte antigens-DQ antibodies in kidney transplantation: A retrospective study. [PDF]
Guissouss O +9 more
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HISTOCOMPATIBILITY TESTING FOR LEUCOCYTE TRANSFUSION
The Lancet, 1970Abstract HL-A typing was done on eleven donors and twenty-eight recipients of chronic-myelogenous-leukaemia leucocyte transfusions in an attempt to clarify what relationship leucocyteantigen compatibility has to the response to granulocyte transfusion. The degree of histocompatibility between donor and recipient was correlated with percentage recovery
R G, Graw +3 more
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Histocompatibility Testing 1965
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966The second international symposium on histocompatibility testing, which was held in Leiden, the Netherlands, in August 1965, emphasized the serological methods of determining histocompatibility antigens in man. This book is a literal account of the symposium, including a summary of the workshop which followed.
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1993
Abstract Successful transplantation depends on the minimization of immunological differences between the donor and recipient tissues. These differences are based on polymorphisms of the human major histocompatibility complex and play a major role in determining the acceptance or rejection of allografts during transplantation ...
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Abstract Successful transplantation depends on the minimization of immunological differences between the donor and recipient tissues. These differences are based on polymorphisms of the human major histocompatibility complex and play a major role in determining the acceptance or rejection of allografts during transplantation ...
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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 ...
Joseph M. Ladowski, Gregory R. Martens
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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.
E, Cohen +3 more
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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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