Results 191 to 200 of about 6,104 (231)
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Immunobiology of cartilage

Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, 1975
Abstract Although conflicting data have been presented, several definitive conclusions may be reached. Success may be anticipated using intact autogenous cartilage grafts of varying structure if septic and mechanical problems can be circumvented. In contrast, the allogeneic grafting of such tissue has a high failure rate, even in conjunction with ...
J H, Herman, B A, Carpenter
openaire   +2 more sources

The immunobiology of Chlamydia

Immunology Today, 1987
Bacteria of the genus Chlamydia cause a wide variety of disorders in animals and people worldwide. The immune response to chlamydiae is poorly understood and, as Daniel Levitt shows here, there is recent evidence that these organisms induce perturbations in immune function that may assist their own survival in infected hosts and that of co-infecting ...
D, Levitt, J, Barol
openaire   +2 more sources

Instituto Butantan and Instituto Clodomiro Picado: a long-standing partnership in science, technology, and public health.

Toxicon, 2021
Instituto Butantan (São Paulo, Brazil) and Instituto Clodomiro Picado (San José, Costa Rica) are public institutions devoted to scientific and technological research, production of antivenoms and other immunobiologicals, and a variety of public health ...
J. Gutiérrez, C. Teixeira, H. W. Fan
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The immunobiology of zinc

Immunology Today, 1997
Abstract Zinc is required for range of immune functions, including T-cell activity, Here, Lothar Rink and colleagues review its roles, and discuss the implications for its therapeutic use.
N, Wellinghausen, H, Kirchner, L, Rink
openaire   +2 more sources

The immunobiology of schistosomiasis

Nature Reviews Immunology, 2002
Schistosomes are parasitic worms that are a prime example of a complex multicellular pathogen that flourishes in the human host despite the development of a pronounced immune response. Understanding how the immune system deals with such pathogens is a daunting challenge.
Pearce, Edward J.   +1 more
openaire   +3 more sources

The Immunobiology of Abortion

New England Journal of Medicine, 1976
How is the fetus permitted 270 days of intrauterine life by the same mother who will promptly reject fetal or paternal tissues grafted at any other site? Intensive research effort during the past 20 years has yielded much new information, but this immunologic enigma remains unresolved.
openaire   +2 more sources

Tumour immunobiology

Medical Hypotheses, 1981
A hypothesis for the interactional mechanism between tumour cells and the lymphopoeitic system, with its resulting sequence of immune depression is outlined, along with a review of the current literature relating to this area. The concept that the tumour cell surface is responsible not only for loss of cell surface contact inhibition, but also ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The Immunobiology of Leishmaniasis

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1983
Members of the genus Leishmania are important intracellular pathogens that produce either cutaneous, mucocutaneous, or visceral disease in many areas of the world. In humans as well as in other mammals, the parasite is inoculated through the skin as a flagellated, extracellular promastigote by its arthropod vector, the sandfly.
R D, Pearson   +3 more
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Evolutionary immunobiology

Immunology Today, 1989
Identifying the evolutionary origin of inducible, specific immune recognition represents a major objective in developmental immunology. In order to address this issue from an overall phylogenetic perspective, major studies of cellular and humoral immune function are being undertaken using lower vertebrate and invertebrate models. Here, C.
C L, Reinisch, G W, Litman
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The Immunobiology of Transplantation

Archives of Surgery, 1972
In the scant space of 200 pages, R. E. Billingham and W. K. Silvers have covered their large and expanding subject as only deeply grounded experts can. Aided by a series of particularly clear and informative illustrations, the sometimes complex experimental basis of the field is described with elegance and remarkable economy of words. The book appears
openaire   +1 more source

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