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- Book[edited by] K. Frank Austen ... [et al.].Contents:
v. 1. Recognition : innate and adaptive immunity
Effector mechanisms : innate and adaptive
Primary immunodeficiencies
Proliferation disorders of immunologic cells
v. 2. Systemic diseases
Organ-specific diseases
Allergic diseases
Evasion, activation and ineffective immunity
Transplantation
Therapeutic immunology.Digital Access Ovid 2001 - ArticleHsia JC, Kwan NH, Er SS, Wood DJ, Chance GW.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1978 Mar;75(3):1542-5.The capacity of human serum albumin to bind bilirubin is of paramount importance in the prevention of neurological damage due to hyperbilirubinemia in the neonate. Currently, there is no rapid, reliable method to determine the reserve bilirubin loading capacity of serum albumin. A method using electron spin resonance spectroscopy with a dianionic spin-label molecular probe [1-N-(2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-oxyl-4-piperidinyl)-5-N-(1-aspartate)-2,4-dinitrobenzene] is presented which yields the reserve binding capacity of the bilirubin high-affinity binding site on human serum albumin and reserve bilirubin loading capacity of serum in mg/dl. Clinical validation of this spin assay may improve the neonatal care of jaundiced newborns.