
Legend Ectoderm – covering cells, sensory and nerve cells, cells
... Fuckies is achieved via fragmentation, meaning a new head segments is grown which grows a few segments and then cuts off the original organism (autotomy). Polychaeta are more primitive and hence have greater regenerative abilities. These abilities don’t exist in polychaetes and hirudineans. Polychae ...
... Fuckies is achieved via fragmentation, meaning a new head segments is grown which grows a few segments and then cuts off the original organism (autotomy). Polychaeta are more primitive and hence have greater regenerative abilities. These abilities don’t exist in polychaetes and hirudineans. Polychae ...
English_Jaringan Tumbuhan 2005-01
... Through this, side by side cytoplasm cells (plasmodesmata) can be well-connected one another. ...
... Through this, side by side cytoplasm cells (plasmodesmata) can be well-connected one another. ...
Full Text
... The production and study of various transgenic animals such as the mouse and Drosophila has benefitted both fundamental and applied biological research. In contrast, although transgenic birds would provide an excellent model for developmental studies, could be an asset to the poultry breeding indust ...
... The production and study of various transgenic animals such as the mouse and Drosophila has benefitted both fundamental and applied biological research. In contrast, although transgenic birds would provide an excellent model for developmental studies, could be an asset to the poultry breeding indust ...
PAROTID GLANDS - Chennai City Branch Of ASI
... FNAC is the diagnostic MRI is superior in demonstrating benign tumors than CT CT scan/MRI identifies regional lymph node involvement/ extension into deep lobe / parapharyngeal space PET may be useful in assessing malignant tumors ...
... FNAC is the diagnostic MRI is superior in demonstrating benign tumors than CT CT scan/MRI identifies regional lymph node involvement/ extension into deep lobe / parapharyngeal space PET may be useful in assessing malignant tumors ...
Embryology Lec13 Dr.Ban Skeletal system Skeletal development
... case. This involves the local accumulation of mesenchymal cells at the site of the future bone. These cells then differentiate directly into bone producing cells, which form the skull bones through the process of intramembranous ossification. As the brain case bones grow in the fetal skull, they rem ...
... case. This involves the local accumulation of mesenchymal cells at the site of the future bone. These cells then differentiate directly into bone producing cells, which form the skull bones through the process of intramembranous ossification. As the brain case bones grow in the fetal skull, they rem ...
The Special Senses
... hair, which extends into a layer of mucous on its free surface This olfactory hair contains receptors on its plasma membrane which can detect specific chemicals in the mucous. ...
... hair, which extends into a layer of mucous on its free surface This olfactory hair contains receptors on its plasma membrane which can detect specific chemicals in the mucous. ...
ears: the vestibuloauditory system
... vestibular branch of the eighth cranial nerve. The apical surface of the hair cells is covered by a gelatinous otolithic layer or membrane (contains otoliths which are crystalline structures). The hair cell contains numerous straight stereocilia and a longer single kinocilium, a modified cilium whos ...
... vestibular branch of the eighth cranial nerve. The apical surface of the hair cells is covered by a gelatinous otolithic layer or membrane (contains otoliths which are crystalline structures). The hair cell contains numerous straight stereocilia and a longer single kinocilium, a modified cilium whos ...
Anatomy handout
... Lymph is derived from the portions of the blood which pass through the walls of the capillaries. It consists of plasma and leukocytes and is very little different from blood minus its red corpuscles. It occupies the spaces between the cells of the body. The lymphatic system starts in the intercellul ...
... Lymph is derived from the portions of the blood which pass through the walls of the capillaries. It consists of plasma and leukocytes and is very little different from blood minus its red corpuscles. It occupies the spaces between the cells of the body. The lymphatic system starts in the intercellul ...
The Blood
... Hypoxia → erythropoietin (kidney)→ red marrow of long bones→ erythroid stem cell→ erythroblasts cell division→ smaller cells loosing nucleus and gaining hemoglobin → reticulocyte→ mature RBC Reticulocytes contain remnants of cell organelles Their presence in excess in the peripheral blood (>2%) indi ...
... Hypoxia → erythropoietin (kidney)→ red marrow of long bones→ erythroid stem cell→ erythroblasts cell division→ smaller cells loosing nucleus and gaining hemoglobin → reticulocyte→ mature RBC Reticulocytes contain remnants of cell organelles Their presence in excess in the peripheral blood (>2%) indi ...
Metastatic castration resistant prostate icd 10
... than 80% of men with metastatic prostate cancer. Table 2. Summary of approved chemotherapy agents in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. Drug Phase III trial Indication September 8, 2014. Introduction. To help doctors give their patients the best possible care, the American Society of C ...
... than 80% of men with metastatic prostate cancer. Table 2. Summary of approved chemotherapy agents in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. Drug Phase III trial Indication September 8, 2014. Introduction. To help doctors give their patients the best possible care, the American Society of C ...
The thymus
... Few words about thyroid hormones • Follicular cells actively capture iodine from blood and bind it to tyrosine • Triiodthyronin (T3) or tetraiodthyronin (thyroxin, T4) bind to globulin and are stored in colloid as an inactive thyroglobulin • According to needs the follicular cells uptake thyreoglob ...
... Few words about thyroid hormones • Follicular cells actively capture iodine from blood and bind it to tyrosine • Triiodthyronin (T3) or tetraiodthyronin (thyroxin, T4) bind to globulin and are stored in colloid as an inactive thyroglobulin • According to needs the follicular cells uptake thyreoglob ...
The Special Senses
... – These and supporting cells innervated by facial (VII) nerve - in presence of certain odors, there is increased activity of lacrimal gland and nasal mucus glands Site of Olfaction (graphic) Olfactory Epithelium (graphic) Olfactory Epithelium (graphic) Olfactory Receptors • 10-100 million receptors ...
... – These and supporting cells innervated by facial (VII) nerve - in presence of certain odors, there is increased activity of lacrimal gland and nasal mucus glands Site of Olfaction (graphic) Olfactory Epithelium (graphic) Olfactory Epithelium (graphic) Olfactory Receptors • 10-100 million receptors ...
Week 2 of development
... Cells of the ventral/medial wall become less compact and migrate to the direction of the somite- these cells form the sclerotome ...
... Cells of the ventral/medial wall become less compact and migrate to the direction of the somite- these cells form the sclerotome ...
The Digestive Tract of the Cod Eleutheroembryo ("Yolk
... from 5 or 6 days or about 5 mm, to the completion of metamorphosis, at about 75 days or 20 mm. At 9 days, or 5.5–6.0 mm, the digestive tract is wide and sinuous, and the yolk-sac much reduced, so that larvae are dependent on the availability of planktonic food. It has been proposed that this is a “c ...
... from 5 or 6 days or about 5 mm, to the completion of metamorphosis, at about 75 days or 20 mm. At 9 days, or 5.5–6.0 mm, the digestive tract is wide and sinuous, and the yolk-sac much reduced, so that larvae are dependent on the availability of planktonic food. It has been proposed that this is a “c ...
Document
... •They bind to specific sites on antigen surfaces. •Antibodies don’t kill organisms. However, they: •can inactivate an invader, and •initiate the process of activating phagocytic cells and other natural killers. •Can combine with bacterial toxins or viruses to prevent attachment to target cells (“ina ...
... •They bind to specific sites on antigen surfaces. •Antibodies don’t kill organisms. However, they: •can inactivate an invader, and •initiate the process of activating phagocytic cells and other natural killers. •Can combine with bacterial toxins or viruses to prevent attachment to target cells (“ina ...
Arch Nerve Muscles Skeleton
... Clicker questions • Intro to histology • Embryology • Epithelium These are the slides we went through at the beginning of class on Tuesday, August 11. ...
... Clicker questions • Intro to histology • Embryology • Epithelium These are the slides we went through at the beginning of class on Tuesday, August 11. ...
Auditory Pathways - Viktor`s Notes for the Neurosurgery Resident
... Rinne is negative (abnormal) Sensorineural hearing loss – cochlea, cochlear part of CN8. Weber lateralizes to normal side Rinne is positive in mild cases (in severe cases, 512 Hz tunning fork is not heard at either position) tinnitus Central deafness – cochlear nuclei, central connections, a ...
... Rinne is negative (abnormal) Sensorineural hearing loss – cochlea, cochlear part of CN8. Weber lateralizes to normal side Rinne is positive in mild cases (in severe cases, 512 Hz tunning fork is not heard at either position) tinnitus Central deafness – cochlear nuclei, central connections, a ...
Chemoreception
... stimulus. It plays a major role in the lives of fishes, including feeding, prey detection, predator avoidance, species and sex recognition, sexual behaviour and migration. ...
... stimulus. It plays a major role in the lives of fishes, including feeding, prey detection, predator avoidance, species and sex recognition, sexual behaviour and migration. ...
Chapter 8 - Blood Type
... Rh Factor – If a person is + for Rh, they can receive ______ or _______ If a person is – for Rh, they can only receive ________ ...
... Rh Factor – If a person is + for Rh, they can receive ______ or _______ If a person is – for Rh, they can only receive ________ ...
Extraembryonic membranes
... lateral folds pinch the embryo away from the yolk. • The yolk stalk (formed mostly by hypoblast cells) will keep the embryo attached to the yolk. • The three germ layers and hypoblast cells contribute to the extraembyonic ...
... lateral folds pinch the embryo away from the yolk. • The yolk stalk (formed mostly by hypoblast cells) will keep the embryo attached to the yolk. • The three germ layers and hypoblast cells contribute to the extraembyonic ...
Mediastinal Masses & Thymomas
... The most common chemotherapy drugs in the treatment of thymoma are: ...
... The most common chemotherapy drugs in the treatment of thymoma are: ...
Module 21 / Gross Anatomy of the Integumentary System
... The most superficial layer, the epidermis, is composed of stratified squamous epithelia that are keratinized at the outermost surface, melanocytes, immune cells (Langerhans that modulate immune response) and sensory receptors (Merkel cells that detect light touch). The function of the epidermis laye ...
... The most superficial layer, the epidermis, is composed of stratified squamous epithelia that are keratinized at the outermost surface, melanocytes, immune cells (Langerhans that modulate immune response) and sensory receptors (Merkel cells that detect light touch). The function of the epidermis laye ...
Circulating tumor cell
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are cells that have shed into the vasculature from a primary tumor and circulate in the bloodstream. CTCs thus constitute seeds for subsequent growth of additional tumors (metastasis) in vital distant organs, triggering a mechanism that is responsible for the vast majority of cancer-related deaths.CTCs were observed for the first time in 1869 in the blood of a man with metastatic cancer by Thomas Ashworth, who postulated that “cells identical with those of the cancer itself being seen in the blood may tend to throw some light upon the mode of origin of multiple tumours existing in the same person”. A thorough comparison of the morphology of the circulating cells to tumor cells from different lesions led Ashworth to conclude that “One thing is certain, that if they [CTC] came from an existing cancer structure, they must have passed through the greater part of the circulatory system to have arrived at the internal saphena vein of the sound leg”.The importance of CTC's in modern cancer research began in the mid 1990's with the demonstration [J. Uhr, UT-Dallas, L. Terstappen and P. Liberti, Immunicon, Philadelphia] that CTC's exist early on in the course of the disease. Those results were made possible by exquisitely sensitive magnetic separation technology employing Ferrofluids (colloidal magnetic nanoparticles) and high gradient magnetic separators invented by Liberti at Immunicon and motivated by theoretical calculations by Liberti and Terstappen that indicated very small tumors shedding cells at less than 1.0 % per day should result in detectable cells in blood. A variety of other technologies have been applied to CTC enumeration and identification since that time.Modern cancer research has demonstrated that CTCs derive from clones in the primary tumor, validating Ashworth's remarks. The significant efforts put into understanding the CTCs biological properties have demonstrated the critical role circulating tumor cells play in the metastatic spread of carcinoma.Furthermore, highly sensitive, single-cell analysis demonstrated a high level of heterogeneity seen at the single cell level for both protein expression and protein localization and the CTCs reflected both the primary biopsy and the changes seen in the metastatic sites. Tissue biopsies are poor diagnostic procedures: they are invasive, cannot be used repeatedly, and are ineffective in understanding metastatic risk, disease progression, and treatment effectiveness. CTCs thus could be considered a “liquid biopsy” which reveals metastasis in action, providing live information about the patient’s disease status. Analysis of blood samples found a propensity for increased CTC detection as the disease progressed in individual patients. Blood tests are easy and safe to perform and multiple samples can be taken over time. By contrast, analysis of solid tumors necessitates invasive procedures that might limit patient compliance. The ability to monitor disease progression over time could facilitate appropriate modification to a patient's therapy, potentially improving their prognosis and quality of life.To this end, technologies with the requisite sensitivity and reproducibility to detect CTCs in patients with metastatic disease have recently been developed.