Biological material for bridging dura mater defects. Experimental and clinical study. 1973

N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D002102 Cadaver A dead body, usually a human body. Corpse,Cadavers,Corpses
D004388 Dura Mater The outermost of the three MENINGES, a fibrous membrane of connective tissue that covers the brain and the spinal cord. Falx Cerebelli,Falx Cerebri,Pachymeninx,Tentorium Cerebelli
D006649 Histocompatibility Antigens A group of antigens that includes both the major and minor histocompatibility antigens. The former are genetically determined by the major histocompatibility complex. They determine tissue type for transplantation and cause allograft rejections. The latter are systems of allelic alloantigens that can cause weak transplant rejection. Transplantation Antigens,Antigens, Transplantation,Histocompatibility Antigen,LD Antigens,SD Antigens,Antigen, Histocompatibility,Antigens, Histocompatibility,Antigens, LD,Antigens, SD
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000937 Antigen-Antibody Reactions The processes triggered by interactions of ANTIBODIES with their ANTIGENS. Antigen Antibody Reactions,Antigen-Antibody Reaction,Reaction, Antigen-Antibody,Reactions, Antigen-Antibody
D014021 Tissue Preservation The process by which a tissue or aggregate of cells is kept alive outside of the organism from which it was derived (i.e., kept from decay by means of a chemical agent, cooling, or a fluid substitute that mimics the natural state within the organism). Preservation, Tissue,Preservations, Tissue,Tissue Preservations
D014181 Transplantation Immunology A general term for the complex phenomena involved in allo- and xenograft rejection by a host and graft vs host reaction. Although the reactions involved in transplantation immunology are primarily thymus-dependent phenomena of cellular immunity, humoral factors also play a part in late rejection. Immunology, Transplantation
D014184 Transplantation, Homologous Transplantation between individuals of the same species. Usually refers to genetically disparate individuals in contradistinction to isogeneic transplantation for genetically identical individuals. Transplantation, Allogeneic,Allogeneic Grafting,Allogeneic Transplantation,Allografting,Homografting,Homologous Transplantation,Grafting, Allogeneic

Related Publications

N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
August 1993, Journal of pediatric surgery,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
March 1961, Annals of surgery,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
July 1994, Journal of pediatric surgery,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
November 1962, Bruns' Beitrage zur klinischen Chirurgie,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
January 1965, Voprosy neirokhirurgii,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
March 1966, Giornale italiano di chirurgia,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
January 1962, Acta chirurgica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
January 1990, Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
September 1979, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry,
N S Meskhia, and N D Leybzon, and A S Imamaliev, and A M Berman
June 1962, Surgery,
Copied contents to your clipboard!