|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
Oviductal Recognition of Embryonic Signals; H.B. Croxatto, et al.
Effect of Progesterone Antagonists on Ovo-Endometrial Interactions;
A. Psychoyos. On the Requirement for Estrogen for Establishing
Pregnancy in the Non-Human Primate; N.R. Moudgal. Embryonic Loss
and Conceptus Interferon Production; R.M. Roberts. In Vitro Models
of Implantation; S.R. Glasser, et al. Uterine EGF Ligand-Receptor
Circuitry and Its Role in EmbryoUterine Interactions during
Implantation in the Mouse; S.K. Dey, et al. Human Uterine
Angiogenic Factor (HUAF). The Role of Lymphohematopoietic Cytokines
in Signalling between the Immune and Reproductive Systems; T.G.
Wegmann. Human Decidual Function in Trophoblast and Uterine
interaction; T. Mori, et al. Cytokines at the Maternal Fetal
Interface: Colony Stimulating Factor1 as a Paradigm for the
Maternal Regulation of Muridae Rodents; C. Tachi. Hormonal
Regulation of Uterine Complement; K.B. Isaacson, et al. Insulinlike
Growth Factor Binding Proteins: A Paradigm for Conceptus-Maternal
Interactions in the Primate; A.T. Fazleabas, et al. The Roles of
Growth Factors and Their Receptors in Peri-Implantation Mouse
Embryos and at the Embryomaternal Interface; Z. Werb, et al.
Ligands and Receptors of the Insulin Family: Role in Early
Mammalian Development; S. Heyner, et al. 6 additional articles.
Index.
For over 40 years, Yen & Jaffe's Reproductive Endocrinology has
been the gold standard text of both basic science and clinical
practice of the full range of female and male reproductive
disorders. The fully revised 9th Edition continues this tradition
of excellence with complete coverage, including up-to-date
information on impaired fertility, infertility, recurrent pregnancy
loss, problems of sexual development, menstrual disturbances,
fibroids, endometriosis, female and male reproductive aging,
fertility preservation, assisted reproduction technologies
including ovarian stimulation and ovulation induction, transgender
hormonal treatment, contraception, and more. An outstanding
editorial board and other global experts in the field share their
knowledge and expertise to keep you abreast of current science and
practice in endocrinology. Includes new chapters on Meiosis,
Fertilization and Embryo Development; Recurrent Pregnancy Loss;
Uterus Transplantation; Mitochondrial Transplantation and Gene
Editing; and Germs Cells Developed In Vitro. Provides extensively
revised information on contemporary practices in assisted
reproduction, fertility preservation, and ovulation induction.
Provides an online video library that highlights surgical
procedures, diagnostic imaging, and functional ultrasound imaging.
Adds three new members to the exceptional editorial team: Drs.
Anuja Dokras, Carmen J. Williams, and Zev Williams. Features
full-color, high-quality illustrations that clearly depict basic
anatomic structures, endocrine processes, and cell function and
dysfunction. Includes bulleted lists under major headings in each
chapter for quick, at-a-glance summaries of every section. Lists
Top References at the end of each chapter that distill the most
important references for research underpinnings, to complement the
complete online reference list. An eBook version is included with
purchase. The eBook allows you to access all of the text, figures
and references, with the ability to search, customize your content,
make notes and highlights, and have content read aloud.
Preterm delivery is a major public health concern. Recent
developments, such as the preventive use of progesterone, and new
data on possible mechanisms of initiation of parturition, have
placed the topic at the forefront of the interests and
preoccupation of many in maternal-fetal medicine and obstetrics.
This balanced, authoritative, and well-referenced work offers a
rigorous underpinning of basic science, highlighted translational
science sections, and evidence-based clinical guidelines.
Human reproduction is the most dynamic of processes. The events
which lead to the birth of a normal healthy infant have their
origin long before actual fertilization. Indeed, the whole process
can be looked upon as a continuum. Human fertilization and early
development, once sequestered in the protective environment of the
fallopian tubes and uterus, have now been exposed in the
laboratory. These events have, over time, been extensively observed
and catalogued in animal models. The tools of modem morphology and
molecular biology have reopened issues long since considered
settled as facets of early reproduction are reexplored. This
volume, consisting of the proceedings of a workshop on uterine and
embryonic factors in early pregnancy, has been designed to enhance
that effort. Attention is focused largely on early embryonal
development with special attention to the interrelationship between
the embryo and the uterus in early pregnancy. Each of the
contributing scientists brings with him or her the perspective of
one specific discipline or another. The common denominator is the
application of emerging techniques in modem molecular biology to
problems pertaining to embryonal-uterine interaction. The goal is
to consider specific areas of concern in a multidisciplinary way
and to reexplore the factors behind early development and
implantation. Uterine complement, the function of uterine
macrophages immunoregulatory loops in the peri-implantation period,
colony stimulating factors and interferon-like factors are reviewed
and their interrelationship explored. Uterine angiogenesis factors
as well as embryonic growth factors are also considered.
The regulation of cell death in various reproductive tissues, as in
other ma jor organ systems of the body, has become a focal point of
research activity in many laboratories over the past few years. As
such, the need for a "for mal" meeting to highlight recent work in
this field, as well as to integrate knowledge from other sources
(such as investigators working on cell death in cancer and immune
function) in the broad context of identifying con served pathways
that coordinate life-and-death decisions in diverse cell types,
became apparent. Therefore, the goals of the Scientific Committee
of the International Symposium on Cell Death in Reproductive
Physiology, spon sored by Serono Symposia USA, were already
predetermined by this need. Simply stated, we sought to bring
together for the first time a select cohort of reproductive
biologists and cell death researchers, many but not all cho sen
based on their pioneering efforts in elucidating the fundamental
aspects of apoptosis in reproductive and nonreproductive tissues,
as a means to re view the current status of the field, foster new
ideas, and promote scientific collaborations. In the ensuing
chapters of this book, summaries of work dis cussed at the meeting
are presented to emphasize both the diversity and the similarities
in the occurrence and regulation of apoptosis in tissues of the
male and female reproductive systems.
Die pathologische Anatomie der Placenta beschlagt ein:
Forschungsgebiet, das uber viele Jahre vernachlassigt worden ist.
Sie gehorte zum Niemandsland zwi schen Geburtshelfer und Anatomen.
Dies ganz zu Unrecht, bietet doch die normale und pathologische
Anatomie der Placenta eine Fulle interessanter Probleme. Gegenuber
den alteren Darstellungen der pathologischen Anatomie der Placenta
sind in den letzten drei Jahrzehnten wesentliche neue Aspekte
hinzugekommen: 1. hat das normalanatomische Bild der Placenta durch
elektronenoptische Untersuchungen eine ungewohnliche Bereicherung
erfahren; 2. ist die Placenta ein Spiegel der verschiedensten
Membranfunktionen; 3. hat die anatomische Uberprufung der Placenta
im Hinblick auf die peri natale Mortalitat eine wesentliche
Aufwertung und Vertiefung erfahren; 4. nimmt die Placenta in der
Abklarung der hypoxamischen Gewebsschadi gungen, insbesondere der
Chromosomen des Foetus, eine Schlusselstellung ein. Die Einfuhrung
in die normale Anatomie der Placenta, einschliesslich der
elektronenoptischen Befunde, hat in dankenswerter Weise Herr
Professor Dr. F. Strauss vom Anatomischen Institut in Bern
ubernommen. Er hat sich seit Jahrzehnten mit diesem Problem
beschaftigt. Die Bearbeitung der pathologischen Anatomie der
Placenta liegt in den Handen von Professor Dr. K. Benirschke und
Frau Dr. S. Driscoll. Professor Benirschke hat sich zunachst unter
Leitung von Professor Dr. A. Hertig an der Harvard Medical School
in Boston, Mass. (USA), dann in selbstandiger Stellung an der
Dartmouth Medical School Hanover, New Hampshire, um die Abklarung
der pathologischen Anatomie der Placenta be muht. Er verfugt,
zusammen mit seiner Mitarbeiterin, Frau Dr."
|
You may like...
Higher
Michael Buble
CD
(1)
R459
Discovery Miles 4 590
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|