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Editorial: Unraveling circRNAs and miRNAs: key regulators in immune-related diseases. [PDF]
Hakim MS +3 more
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Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 1995
The success of transplantation is such that it is now the treatment of choice for many of those requiring renal replacement therapy. The use of other solid organs, including liver, pancreas, heart and lung, continues to progress. This article reviews some recent advances in our understanding of the immunological response to alloantigen and xenoantigen.
S T, Ball, M J, Dallman
openaire +2 more sources
The success of transplantation is such that it is now the treatment of choice for many of those requiring renal replacement therapy. The use of other solid organs, including liver, pancreas, heart and lung, continues to progress. This article reviews some recent advances in our understanding of the immunological response to alloantigen and xenoantigen.
S T, Ball, M J, Dallman
openaire +2 more sources
Surgical technology international, 2015
The replacement of diseased or damaged organs by transplantation became a reality in 1954, when a kidney was transplanted from one monozygotic twin to another. Barring technical difficulties, a graft between genetically identical (syngeneic) individuals is readily accepted and is termed an isograft.
Mihir M. Shah +2 more
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The replacement of diseased or damaged organs by transplantation became a reality in 1954, when a kidney was transplanted from one monozygotic twin to another. Barring technical difficulties, a graft between genetically identical (syngeneic) individuals is readily accepted and is termed an isograft.
Mihir M. Shah +2 more
+5 more sources
Basic Transplantation Immunology
Surgical Clinics of North America, 2006Humans are protected from a daily onslaught of pathogenic organisms by an immune system that provides multiple layers of protection. Until solid organ transplantation became technically feasible in the early twentieth century, this constant state of surveillance for foreign cells that are associated with the immune response mostly was viewed as ...
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