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Bone Marrow Purging
|
D016465 |
[Techniques for the removal of subpopulations of cells (usually residual tumor cells) from the bone marrow ex vivo before it is infused. The purging is achieved by a variety of agents including pharmacologic agents, biophysical agents (laser photoirradiation or radioisotopes) and immunologic agents. Bone marrow purging is used in both autologous and allogeneic BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION.
] |
|
Regulatory Sequences, Ribonucleic Acid
|
G05.360.080.689.687 |
|
|
Stimulants, Historical
|
D27.505.954.888 |
|
|
Therapeutic Uses
|
D27.505.954 |
|
|
Retinaldehyde
|
D02.455.426.392.368.367.379.249.700.690 |
|
|
Retinoids
|
D02.455.426.392.368.367.379.249.700 |
|
|
CHO Cells
|
D016466 |
[CELL LINE derived from the ovary of the Chinese hamster, Cricetulus griseus (CRICETULUS). The species is a favorite for cytogenetic studies because of its small chromosome number. The cell line has provided model systems for the study of genetic alterations in cultured mammalian cells.
] |
|
Sweet Syndrome
|
D016463 |
[Condition characterized by large, rapidly extending, erythematous, tender plaques on the upper body usually accompanied by fever and dermal infiltration of neutrophilic leukocytes. It occurs mostly in middle-aged women, is often preceded by an upper respiratory infection, and clinically resembles ERYTHEMA MULTIFORME. Sweet syndrome is associated with LEUKEMIA.
] |
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Hamstring Muscles
|
A10.690.552.500.250 |
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|
Muscle, Skeletal
|
A10.690.552.500 |
|
|
Lysosomal Storage Diseases
|
D016464 |
[Inborn errors of metabolism characterized by defects in specific lysosomal hydrolases and resulting in intracellular accumulation of unmetabolized substrates.
] |
|
Fungemia
|
D016469 |
[The presence of fungi circulating in the blood. Opportunistic fungal sepsis is seen most often in immunosuppressed patients with severe neutropenia or in postoperative patients with intravenous catheters and usually follows prolonged antibiotic therapy.
] |
|
Ethers
|
D02.355 |
|
|
Monograph
|
D016467 |
[Work that is any publication that is not a serial or integrating resource. In cataloging usage, It is usually on a single subject or related subjects and is complete in itself, whether constructed of chapters, sections, or parts. While any article encountered in indexing journals can be, strictly speaking, a monograph, as a publication type, a monograph will refer to a cataloging item.
] |
|
Hallux Rigidus
|
C05.550.450 |
|
|
Forestry
|
D016468 |
[The science of developing, caring for, or cultivating forests.
] |
|
Helicobacter pylori
|
D016480 |
[A spiral bacterium active as a human gastric pathogen. It is a gram-negative, urease-positive, curved or slightly spiral organism initially isolated in 1982 from patients with lesions of gastritis or peptic ulcers in Western Australia. Helicobacter pylori was originally classified in the genus CAMPYLOBACTER, but RNA sequencing, cellular fatty acid profiles, growth patterns, and other taxonomic characteristics indicate that the micro-organism should be included in the genus HELICOBACTER. It has been officially transferred to Helicobacter gen. nov. (see Int J Syst Bacteriol 1989 Oct;39(4):297-405).
] |
|
Beta-Globulins
|
D12.776.377.715.182 |
|
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Serum Globulins
|
D12.776.377.715 |
|
|
Lymphoma, AIDS-Related
|
D016483 |
[B-cell lymphoid tumors that occur in association with AIDS. Patients often present with an advanced stage of disease and highly malignant subtypes including BURKITT LYMPHOMA; IMMUNOBLASTIC LARGE-CELL LYMPHOMA; PRIMARY EFFUSION LYMPHOMA; and DIFFUSE, LARGE B-CELL, LYMPHOMA. The tumors are often disseminated in unusual extranodal sites and chromosomal abnormalities are frequently present. It is likely that polyclonal B-cell lymphoproliferation in AIDS is a complex result of EBV infection, HIV antigenic stimulation, and T-cell-dependent HIV activation.
] |