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  • Book
    [edited by] R. Shane Tubbs, Mohammadali M. Shoja, Marios Loukas.
    Contents:
    Skull
    Hyoid bone
    Cervical vertebrae
    Thoracic vertebrae
    Lumbar vertebrae
    Sacrococcygeal vertebrae
    Scapula
    Clavicle
    Humerus
    Radius ulna carpals metacarpals and phalanges
    Ribs and sternum
    Pelvic bones
    Bones of the lower limb
    Temporomandibular joint
    Shoulder joint
    Elbow joint
    Wrist and hand joints
    Sacroiliac joints
    Hip joint
    Knee joint
    Ankle and foot joints
    Orbital muscles
    Middle ear muscles
    Facial muscles and muscles of mastication
    Anterior neck muscles
    Pharyngeal muscles
    Soft palate and tongue muscles
    Prevertebral and craniocervical junction muscles
    Laryngeal muscles
    Back muscles
    Scapulohumeral muscles
    Arm muscles
    Forearm muscles
    Hand intrinsic muscles
    Thoracic wall muscles
    Abdominal wall muscles
    Pelvic diaphragm and external anal sphincter
    Perineal muscles
    Gluteal muscles
    Thigh muscles
    Leg muscles
    Intrinsic muscles of the foot
    Internal carotid artery and anterior cerebral circulation
    Vertebrobasilar arteries
    Persistent fetal intracranial arteries
    Common carotid and cervical internal carotid arteries
    External carotid artery
    Vertebral artery
    Thoracic aorta
    Coronary arteries
    Pulmonary arteries
    Subclavian artery
    Upper limb arteries
    Abdominal aorta
    Renal arteries
    Internal iliac arteries
    Lower limb arteries
    Arteries of the spinal cord
    Diploic veins
    Dural venous sinuses
    Cerebral veins
    Emissary veins
    Veins of the neck
    Veins of the upper limb
    Intrathoracic veins
    Cardiac veins
    Pulmonary veins
    Inferior vena cava portal and hepatic venous systems
    Adrenal renal gonadal azygos hemiazygos lumbar and ascending lumbar veins
    Iliac veins
    Veins of the lower limb
    Venous drainage of the spinal cord
    Thymus
    Tonsils
    Thoracic duct chyle cistern and right lymphatic duct
    Lymphatics of the lower limb
    Forebrain
    Cerebral ventricles
    Pons medulla oblongata and cerebellum
    Subarachnoid space
    Meninges
    Spinal cord and associated structures
    Cranial nerves N-VI
    Facial nerve
    Vestibulocochlear nerve
    Glossopharyngeal nerve
    Vagus accessory and hypoglossal nerves
    Autonomic nervous system
    Spinal nerves
    Cervical plexus
    Nerves of the upper extremity
    Lumbosacral plexus
    Facial asymmetry
    Eyelids eyelashes and eyebrows
    Eye and lacrimal apparatus
    Lateral nasal wall and paranasal sinuses
    Ear
    Salivary glands and ducts
    Thyroid gland
    Parathyroid glands
    Laryngeal cartilages
    Trachea
    Lungs
    Heart
    Esophagus
    Stomach
    Gallbladder and extrahepatic bile ducts
    Liver
    Pancreas
    Spleen
    Small intestines appendix and colon
    Sigmoid colon rectum and anus
    Kidney urinary bladder and ureter
    Adrenal gland
    Male genitourinary system
    Female genital system
    Placenta and umbilical cord
    Breast.
    Digital Access Wiley 2016
  • Book
    edited by John G. Taylor and Andrew Turton.
    Summary: An attempt to provide an overview of the main aspects of development - economic, political, social and cultural in South East Asia. The work offers detailed empirical analyses of the salient features of the structures of SE Asian societies, focusing on the future. Nielsen 9780333292785 20160527

    Contents:
    Part 1 Nation, state and politics: contradictions in the development of Malay capital - state, accumulation and legitimation - Lim Mah Hui
    an undeveloped state - the study of modern Burma's politics, Robert H.Taylor
    the transformation of the state in Indonesia, Richard Robinson. Part 2 Industrialization - capital and labour: the state and capitalist development in Thailand, Kevin J.Hewison
    peripheral intermediation - Singapore and the emerging international economic order, Hafiz Mirza
    wage labour in West Malaysia - a study of five factories, Hing Ai Yun. Part 3 Agrarian differentiation: rice harvesting in Kali Loro - a study of class and labour relations in rural Java, Ann L.Stoler
    strategies for control of labour in share-cropping and tenancy arrangements, Anan Ganjanapan
    agrarian differentiation in the southern region of Vietnam, Ngo Vinh Long. Part 4 Production and gender relations: subordination of women and lack of industrial strife in West Java, Celia Mather
    Philippine domestic outwork - subcontracting for export-oriented industries, Rosalindo Pinedo-Ofreneo
    socialist transformation of agriculture and gender relations - the Vietnamese case, Christine Pelkzer White. Part 5 Culture and ideology: ideology and social structure in Indonesia, Joel S.Khan
    toward a history from below, Reynaldo Clemena Ileto
    rituals of compassion and social control, James C. Scott
    ideological commodity production, Andrew Turton. Part 6 Ethnic histories and identities: the interiorizations of a perennial minority group, Leo Alting von Geusau
    the Hmong - political economy of an illegal crop, Nicholas Tapp
    Kalinga history and historical consciousness, Esteban Magnnon
    transformations of Iban Social consciousness, Motomitsu Uchibori. Nielsen 9780333292785 20160527
    Print 1988
  • Article
    Anderhub B, Pitt TL, Erdman YJ, Willcox WR.
    J Hyg (Lond). 1977 Aug;79(1):89-102.
    A simple method for the bacteriocine typing of Serratia marcescens without the use of induction was sought. The results of a mutual inhibition experiment with 89 unrelated cultures indicated that a bacteriocine-susceptibility method would give more discrimination between strains than would a bacteriocine-production method. A cross-streaking technique for bacteriocine-susceptibility typing without previous induction was developed, and its performance was compared with that of another susceptibility-typing method in which cell-free lysates of the producer strains were obtained by induction with mitomycin C.Replicate typing of the same collection of cultures by both methods indicated that small variations in pattern were common and that larger variations occurred occasionally. Differences in pattern of less than two strong reactions in the mitomycin-C induction method, and of less than three strong reactions in the cross-streaking method, should therefore not be taken as evidence that strains can be distinguished.Sets of cultures of Ser. marcescens, 178 in total, from a number of supposed incidents of infection in hospitals, were used to evaluate the two bacteriocine-typing methods; all of the cultures were also O serogrouped. Comparison of the typing patterns of members of the same O serogroup from clear-cut incidents of infection confirmed that results of acceptable reliability could be obtained by either bacteriocine-typing method by the application of the appropriate ;difference' rule. When so interpreted, the cross-streaking method appeared to be slightly the more discriminatory.The greatest discrimination between strains was obtained by the use of a ;hierarchical' typing system in which the strains were first O serogrouped, and the cross-streaking method of bacteriocine typing was then used to make subdivisions within O serogroups.
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