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Microchimerism and scleroderma: An update

Current Rheumatology Reports, 2003
Microchimerism has been defined by the presence of a low number of circulating cells transferred from one individual to another. This transfer takes place naturally during pregnancy, between mother and fetus, or between fetuses in multigestational pregnancies.
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Maternal microchimerism

2013
Microchimerism refers to one individual harboring cells or DNA at a low level that derive from another individual. The most common source is pregnancy when cells from the fetus and the mother pass the placenta bidirectionally, and give rise to maternal microchimerism (cells from the mother in the fetus) and fetal microchimerism (cells from the fetus in
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Microchimerism and rejection in clinical transplantation

Lancet, The, 1997
Christian P Larsen
exaly  

Microchimerism and transplant tolerance

Immunology Today, 1997
G A, Bishop   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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