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Lymphocytic hypophysitis

Journal of Clinical Neuroscience, 2003
Lymphocytic hypophysitis is a rare but important cause of pituitary hypofunction which predominantly affects young women in the peripartum period. It is believed to be an autoimmune disorder with an association with other autoimmune disorders and expression of anti-pituitary cytosolic and anti-nuclear antibodies. Clinically, it presents most frequently
Wai Hoe, Ng   +2 more
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Lymphocyte homeostasis

Seminars in Immunology, 1997
B- and T-lymphocyte populations have an independent homeostatic regulation of resting (B and T) and activated (B) or memory (T) cell compartments. This organization may provide an efficient mechanism to ensure simultaneously a first natural barrier of protection against common pathogens, the maintenance of immunological T-cell memory and a reservoir of
Tanchot, Corinne   +4 more
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Lymphocyte cooperation

Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences, 1971
Figure 1 illustrates schematically a mechanism that my colleagues and I believe may participate in the cooperative effect in antibody formation. Its essential feature is that thymus-derived cells, in response to antigen, release a soluble factor that is cytophilic for local macrophages and there binds antigen for presentation to the antibody-forming ...
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Lymphocyte rings

Diagnostic Cytopathology, 2022
Maxwell Taylor, Roth   +4 more
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Lymphocytic Adenohypophysitis

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 2011
Lymphocytic adenohypophysitis is a rare but important cause of decreased pituitary function, which predominantly affects young women in pregnancy or the peripartum period. It is an autoimmune disease of the pituitary gland which can present with varying degrees of pituitary hormonal impairment and/or with symptoms related to pituitary enlargement ...
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[Lymphocytes and lymphocyte subpopulations].

Immunitat und Infektion, 1984
Human lymphocytes can be subdivided in several subgroups by means of their membrane markers. T-lymphocytes, B-lymphocytes and natural killer cells can be enumerated with monoclonal antibodies reacting with surface glycoproteins or with antibodies against surface immunoglobulins.
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Lymphocytes

2003
Dhanalakashmi, Chinnasamy   +1 more
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Lymphocyte development

Current Opinion in Immunology, 2003
Ellen, Robey, Mark, Schlissel
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Lymphocyte development

Current Opinion in Immunology, 2013
Kopf, Manfred, Spits, Hergen
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