Results 301 to 310 of about 178,306 (353)
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Tissue banking in Mexico

Cell and Tissue Banking, 2006
Here, we describe our Tissue Banking experiences of 4 years of activity in Mexico.Data of allografts provided by our Bank and bone retrievals performed by our teams between February of 2001 and August of 2004 were included.There were 100 bone donors, a total of 1,107 tissues were obtained with an average of 11 tissues by retrieval, samples from all ...
R, Galvan   +3 more
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Tissue Banking in Australia

Cell and Tissue Banking, 2003
The legal structure for the regulation of tissue banking has existed for many years. In Australia, the donation of human tissue is regulated by legislation in each of the eight States and Territories. These substantially uniform Acts were passed in the late 1970's and early 1980's, based on model legislation and underpinned by the concept of consensual
Lynette, Ireland, Helen, McKelvie
openaire   +2 more sources

European Association of Tissue Banks Standards for Cryopreserved Cardiovascular Tissue Banking

Cell and Tissue Banking, 2000
The Cardiovascular Tissue Banking Standards are designed as an addition to the General Standards of the European Association of Tissue Banks to provide a minimum acceptable level for the donation, processing, storage, testing, labelling and distribution of cardiac tissue throughout Europe.
R, Parker, C, Hunt
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Tissue Banking

2018
This chapter illustrates how tissue grafts are used clinically, and examines the process by which tissue grafts are collected and treated to improve their clinical efficacy, make them safer, and render them suitable for long-term storage. It also shows how donors are selected and screened, and how consent is obtained.
Richard Lomas   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Ovarian Tissue Banking

Journal of Mammalian Ova Research, 2007
ABSTRACT Ovarian tissue cryopreservation is an effective method for protecting against infertility as well as preservating endangered animal species. The technique is particularly sought after as a strategy against ovarian failure caused by aggressive chemotherapy in young women with cancer.
Akiko Hasegawa   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Ocular Tissue Banking

2021
Disease and trauma can cause loss of corneal transparency or distortion of corneal shape, resulting in severe visual impairment. For many of these patients, the only option to restore vision is a corneal transplant where clear, healthy tissue from a deceased eye donor is used to replace the diseased tissue.
openaire   +1 more source

Tissue preparation and banking

2006
With the increasing application of genomic and proteomic technologies to the research of neurological and psychiatric disorders it has become imperative that the postmortem tissue utilized be of the highest quality possible. Every step of the research design, from identifying donors, acquiring sufficient information for accurate diagnosis, to assessing
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Prostate Tissue Banking

2012
As the most common non-dermatologic malignancy affecting males in the Western world, and the second leading cause of male cancer-related deaths, the importance of prostate cancer research needs little justification [1]. Epidemiologic reports have described the significant heritability of such malignancies, with one twin-study attributing 42 % (CI 29–50
Harveer Dev   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Tissue Banking: The United States Navy Tissue Bank

Military Medicine, 1977
R W, Bright   +2 more
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Chernobyl Tissue Bank

2017
The Chernobyl Tissue Bank (CTB) was established in 1998 to collect, store and distribute biological samples from patients born on or after 26th April 1967, and resident in the regions of Ukraine and Russia contaminated by fallout from the Chernobyl accident and who developed thyroid cancer.
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