Results 311 to 320 of about 1,598,228 (339)
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Current Rheumatology Reports, 2000
A most unusual inflammatory myopathy, called macrophagic myofasciitis, first described by the Groupe d'Etudes et Recherche sur les Maladies Musculaires Acquises et Dysimmunitaires (GERMMAD), a specific branch of the Association Française contre les Myopathies was recorded with an increasing frequency from 1993 in the main French myopathologic centers ...
P, Cherin, R K, Gherardi
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A most unusual inflammatory myopathy, called macrophagic myofasciitis, first described by the Groupe d'Etudes et Recherche sur les Maladies Musculaires Acquises et Dysimmunitaires (GERMMAD), a specific branch of the Association Française contre les Myopathies was recorded with an increasing frequency from 1993 in the main French myopathologic centers ...
P, Cherin, R K, Gherardi
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2011
Macrophages are a diverse phenotype of professional phagocytic cells derived from bone-marrow precursors and parent monocytes in the peripheral blood. They are essential for the maintenance and defence of host tissues, doing so by sensing and engulfing particulate matter and, when necessary, initiating a pro-inflammatory response.
Chris P, Verschoor +2 more
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Macrophages are a diverse phenotype of professional phagocytic cells derived from bone-marrow precursors and parent monocytes in the peripheral blood. They are essential for the maintenance and defence of host tissues, doing so by sensing and engulfing particulate matter and, when necessary, initiating a pro-inflammatory response.
Chris P, Verschoor +2 more
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CRC Critical Reviews in Toxicology, 1979
Multinucleated giant cells are commonly found in a wide variety of inflammatory reactions. They are formed at sites of tissue injury by fusion of freshly exuded monocytes, the rate of fusion being dependent on a range of extracellular and intracellular factors.
John M. Papadimitriou +2 more
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Multinucleated giant cells are commonly found in a wide variety of inflammatory reactions. They are formed at sites of tissue injury by fusion of freshly exuded monocytes, the rate of fusion being dependent on a range of extracellular and intracellular factors.
John M. Papadimitriou +2 more
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BioEssays, 1995
AbstractThe macrophage plays an important role in host development and physiology, and in pathogenesis of many infectious, immunologic and degenerative disease processes. It displays marked heterogeneity of phenotype in different tissues, reflecting local interactions with other cell types, and contributes to host homeostasis through a varied ...
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AbstractThe macrophage plays an important role in host development and physiology, and in pathogenesis of many infectious, immunologic and degenerative disease processes. It displays marked heterogeneity of phenotype in different tissues, reflecting local interactions with other cell types, and contributes to host homeostasis through a varied ...
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Macrophage inflammatory protein 1 modulates macrophage function
The Journal of Immunology, 1992Abstract Macrophage inflammatory protein 1 (MIP 1), initially purified from the conditioned medium of endotoxin-stimulated macrophages, is a low m.w. heparin-binding protein doublet comprising two peptides, MIP 1 α and MIP 1 β. Although native doublet MIP 1 has previously been shown to exert pyrogenic, mitogenic, and proinflammatory ...
T J, Fahey +7 more
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Pathophysiology of Haemostasis and Thrombosis, 1984
Monocytes and macrophages can be induced to produce tissue factor. Recent data suggest that macrophages make other products involved in the extrinsic coagulation pathway. These include vitamin K-dependent factors, factor X activators and a prothrombinase.
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Monocytes and macrophages can be induced to produce tissue factor. Recent data suggest that macrophages make other products involved in the extrinsic coagulation pathway. These include vitamin K-dependent factors, factor X activators and a prothrombinase.
openaire +2 more sources

