Results 261 to 270 of about 167,631 (303)
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1987
The placenta, unfortunately, is often ignored, not only by gynecologists and pediatricians but by pathologists as well. The evaluation of a diseased or dead fetus is really incomplete without the examination of its most accessible organ, the placenta.
Deborah J. Gersell +2 more
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The placenta, unfortunately, is often ignored, not only by gynecologists and pediatricians but by pathologists as well. The evaluation of a diseased or dead fetus is really incomplete without the examination of its most accessible organ, the placenta.
Deborah J. Gersell +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Ultrastructure of the human placenta in metabolic storage disease [PDF]
Eleven placentae and one fibroblast cell culture from pregnancies complicated by various inherited metabolic disorders, together with five chorionic villus biopsies from pregnancies at risk, were examined for ultrastructural evidence of accumulation of metabolites. Abnormal ultrastructural features were present as early as 10 weeks gestation.
Jones, Carolyn J P +3 more
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The placenta in cases of hemolytic disease of the newborn
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1967The changes in the placenta associated with hemolytic disease of the newborn were studied. Twenty-seven placentas from rhesus-isoimmunized mothers and one from a mother with anti-Le were collected and examined histologically and by the large section technique of Gough and Wentworth.
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Retained Placenta in Homozygous Sickle Cell Disease
Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2009To document an increased prevalence of retained placenta in mothers with homozygous sickle cell disease.A retrospective review (January 1, 1992, to December 31, 2005) at the University Hospital of the West Indies revealed 174 singleton deliveries in women with sickle cell disease who were matched by delivery date and age 1:1 with 174 mothers with ...
Donnette, Simms-Stewart +4 more
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Morphology of the placenta in fetal I‐cell disease
Clinical Genetics, 1977Placentas were studied from three interrupted pregnancies of a mother whose first live‐born child had I‐cell disease (mucolipidosis II). I‐cell disease of the fetus was shown by investigation of the amniotic fluid, fetal cells and the aborted fetus in two pregnancies, but in the third case placenta was the only available product of conception. In every
J, Rapola, P, Aula
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The Human Placenta in Health and Disease
Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America, 2020D Michael, Nelson, Leslie, Myatt
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Placenta and Gestational Trophoblastic Disease
2002The placenta and associated membranes show pathologic changes reflecting important intrauterine events affecting both the mother and fetus. Malignant and premalignant gestational trophoblastic lesions and their mimics present immediate diagnostic challenges.
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