Results 261 to 270 of about 421,672 (303)

Organ and tissue transplantation

open access: yesMedical Journal of Australia, 1991
Schofield, Graeme C.
openaire   +3 more sources

Cardiovascular Tissues for Transplantation

Clinics in Laboratory Medicine, 2005
The use of cardiovascular tissue allografts was pioneered by Alexis Carrel[1] in his work on vascular anastomosis. Toward the end of 1940s, Grossand Hufnagel demonstrated the feasibility of using arterial vascularallografts [2,3]. In the following decade there were many reports of use ofsuch allografts to replace patients’ aorta [4–6]. However, results
Manish J, Gandhi, D Michael, Strong
openaire   +2 more sources

FETAL TISSUE TRANSPLANTATION

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1989
The subject of human fetal tissue transplantation has recently become the focus of major public policy debate. In March 1988, Dr Robert Windom, Assistant Secretary of Health, clearly focused the issue for the biomedicai community by prohibiting the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md, from conducting intramural research on the transplantation ...
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Tissue Transplantations in Planarians

2018
Tissue transplantation is an important tool for in vivo studies of pattern organization and axis establishment or maintenance in planarians. Further, transplants can inform on cell movements under different regenerative conditions or genetic backgrounds.
José I, Rojo-Laguna, Emili, Saló
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Tissue Transplantation

New England Journal of Medicine, 1964
H. B. Stone, W. J. Kennedy
  +6 more sources

Human Tissue Transplantation

1967
Publisher Summary This chapter focuses on primarily renal transplantation in man. In the process of transplanting livers, kidneys, and skin in the human the development of new syndromes was found. The behavior of man to the allografting of tissues and organs is similar to that of lower mammals, it is not identical. It is possible in man to transplant
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Combined Transplantation of Free Tissues

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1987
Combined transplantation of free tissues is a new microsurgical technique by which, with only one set of vessels supplying blood, two or more free tissues can be transplanted simultaneously. Very large soft-tissue defects that are not amenable to conventional transplantation, or defects of two or more tissues, either similar or different in nature, can
openaire   +3 more sources

Transplantation of Central Nervous Tissue

Neurosurgery, 1983
The inability of the central nervous system (CNS) to regenerate after injury has long been known. However, extensive research into regeneration during the past 2 decades has demonstrated a degree of CNS plasticity that was heretofore thought impossible.
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Composite Tissue Transplantation

2013
Composite tissue transplantation is an emerging new era in transplant medicine and has become a viable reconstructive option for patients with large and devastating tissue defects. Advances in microsurgical techniques, transplant immunology and the development of potent immunosuppressive agents have enabled the realization of such types of transplants.
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TRANSPLANTATION OF TISSUES

The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1961
I. S. RAVDIN   +3 more
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