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- BookGeorge Y. Wu, Nathan Selsky, Jane M. Grant-Kels, editors.Summary: Atlas of Dermatological Manifestations of Gastrointestinal Disease provides a comprehensive compendium of digestive tract diseases with dermatological manifestations. The work is arranged by digestive symptoms, with sections based on the specific digestive disease etiology. Each section contains paired chapters of text, one on gastrointestinal manifestations and the other on dermatological manifestations. The atlas includes clinical presentations, pathophysiology, differential diagnosis, diagnostic tests/procedures, pathology, and references presented with substantial numbers of images.
Contents:
Part I. Dyshagia
Part II. Weight loss malabsorption
Part III. Gastrointestinal bleeding
Part IV. Abdominal pain
Part V. Metabolic disturbances
Part VI. Infection
Part VII. Diarrhea
Part VIII. Pancreatic conditions
Part IX. Liver conditions
Index.Digital Access Springer 2013 - ArticleBock R, Jurna I.Cell Tissue Res. 1977 Dec 13;185(2):215-29.Axons terminating in the outer layer of the median eminence of rats contain light microscopically visible granules. The granules are assumed to represent a corticotropin-releasing factor and, therefore, are called CRF-granules. To find out whether neurons containing CRF-granules originate and run together with the neurons of the hypothalamus-neural lobe system (HNS), the effect of unilateral lesions in the HNS on the amount and distribution of CRF-granules was studied in bilaterally adrenalectomized rats. HNS lesions prevented the adrenalectomy-induced increase in CRF-granules on the side of the lesion. Lesions outside the HNS or sham lesions did not influence the amount and distribution of the granules. The findings suggest that CRF-granules are located in terminals of neurons whose perikarya are situated in magnocellular hypothalamic nuclei. It can also be concluded that the axons of these neurons run within the HNS and do not decussate.