Brain Tumor Pathology: Current Diagnostic Hotspots and Pitfalls
By Davide Schiffer 2006
Continue reading →By Davide Schiffer 2006
Continue reading →Edited by Mathias Bahr 2006
Continue reading →Edited by J.T. Hoff, R.F. Keep, G. Xi, and Y. Hua (eds.) 2006 The XIII International Symposium on Brain Edema and Tissue Injury was held June 1–3, 2005, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. This volume includes papers presented at the symposium as well as papers that were presented at a satellite Intracerebral Hemorrhage Conference on June 4, 2005.
Continue reading →John H. Sinard 2006 Demystifying informatics for the practicing anatomic pathologist Almost all areas of intellectual pursuit in which there is an element of subjectivity share an interesting internal paradox. At first exposure, the field is a complete mystery. Then, as one acquires some of the domain knowledge and learns about the rules, the field starts to make sense, […]
Continue reading →Kurt Benirschke Peter Kaufmann Rebecca Baergen 2006 Most obstetricians and pediatricians would agree that the examination of the placenta often helps to explain an abnormal neona tal outcome. As early as in 1892, Ballantyne wrote, A diseased foetus without its placenta is an imperfect specimen, and a description of a foetal malady, unless accompanied by a notice of the […]
Continue reading →Jesus M. Paramio 2006 Molecular biologists’ concept of cells is a “biological container” where important molecules float and interact with one another more or less randomly. However, a close view of this “bag” reveals an astonishing net of fibrous proteins crossing throughout the cytoplasm: the cytoskeleton.
Continue reading →Edited by JAMES R. LUPSKI PAWEL STANKIEWICZ 2006 For five decades since Fred Sanger’s seminal discovery that proteins have a specific structure, since Linus Pauling’s discovery that hemoglobin from patients with sickle cell anemia is molecularly distinct, and since Watson and Crick’s elucidation of the chemical basis of heredity, the molecular basis of disease has been addressed in […]
Continue reading →M. Oehmichen R. N. Auer H.G. König 2006 The present textbook was written with the same intentions as Leestma introduced his excellent monograph (Forensic Neuropathology. Raven, New York, 1988), “to deal with those areas which have the most importance in forensic settings, are typical problem areas, or seem to be poorly understood by most forensic pathologists….”
Continue reading →Eva Brehmer-Andersson 2006 The purpose of this book is to introduce future pathologists and dermatologists to the exciting field of dermatopathology. During the past 40 years dermatopathology has become a big and important topic.
Continue reading →Dorothy L. Rosenthal Stephen S. Raab 2006 The subspecialty of cytopathology is 60 years old and has become established as a solid and reliable discipline in medicine. As expected, cytopathology literature has expanded in a remarkably short period of time, from a few textbooks prior to the 1980s to a current library of texts and journals devoted exclusively to […]
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