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  • Book
    Jonathan S. Steinberg, MD, Suneet Mittal, MD, FACC, FHRS.
    Contents:
    SECTION I EVALUATION AND MANAGEMENT
    1 Bradycardia
    2 Supraventricular tachycardia: AVNRT, AVRT
    3 Atrial arrhythmias
    4 Ventricular tachycardia
    5 Syncope
    6 Sudden cardiac death and the cardiac arrest survivor
    SECTION II THE ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY LABORATORY
    7 Electrophysiology equipment
    8 Electrophysiologic testing : indications and limitations
    9 Principles of mapping and ablation
    10 Indications for cardiac rhythm management devices
    11 Ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring
    SECTION III THE PACEMAKER AND DEFIBRILLATOR CLINIC
    12 Device interrogations and utilization of diagnostic data
    13 Lead management and extraction
    SECTION IV MISCELLANEOUS TOPICS
    14 Approach to the patient with wide complex tachycardia
    15 Antiarrhythmic medications
    16 Channelopathies
    Digital Access Ovid 2017
  • Article
    Pinkus GS, Said JW.
    Am J Pathol. 1977 Nov;89(2):351-66.
    Intracytoplasmic lysozyme (muramidase) may be readily identified in paraffin sections of tissues fixed in formalin or Zenker's acetic acid and in smears of peripheral blood or bone marrow using an immunoperoxidase technique. Sites of intracellular lysozyme in normal human tissues and in various specimens from patients with myeloproliferative and lymphoproliferative disorders, hairy cell leukemia, granulomatous diseases, toxoplasmic lymphadenitis, and other pathologic processes were defined by this method. Intracellular lysozyme was demonstrated in mature and immature neutrophilic and eosinophilic myeloid cells, in monocytic cells, and in some types of histiocytes and had a limited distribution in normal tissues. The neoplastic cells of hairy cell leukemia were devoid of intracytoplasmic lysozyme. Identification of intracellular lysozyme, as determined by the immunoperoxidase technique, was compared with various cytochemical methods, particularly chloroacetate esterase and alpha-naphthyl butyrate esterase studies, for detection and characterization of myeloid cells, monocytes, and histiocytes.
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