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Showing 1 - 2 of
2 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.
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.
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