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- BookHadley M. Wood, Dan Wood, editors.Contents:
1. The transition process: initial assessment and development of a treatment plan
2. Approach to the myelodysplasia patient
3. Approach to the exstrophy patient
4. Approach to the adult hypospadias patient
5. Sexual function and pregnancy in the female myelodyspasia patient
6. Revision genitoplasty, sexual function, fertility, and pelvic organ prolapse in exstrophy and the management of pregnancy
7. Issues in the long-term management of adolescents and adults with DSD: management of gonads, genital reconstruction, and late presentation of the undiagnosed DSD
8. The adult hypospadias patient: technical challenges in adulthood
9. Urinary tract infections in the reconstructed bladder: evaluation and treatment options
10. Troubleshooting continent catheterizable channels
11. Augmentation cytosplasty: risks for malignancy and suggestions for follow-up evaluations
12. BPH and pelvic organ prolapse in patients with neurogenic bladder
13. Posterior urethral valves in adolescents: clinical problems, management, and follow-up
14. Renal transplantation in patients with lower urinary tract dysfunction
15. Management of calculi in patients with congenital neuropathic bladder
16. Vesicoureteral reflux and the adult
17. Adult survivors of pediatric genitourinary tumors
Index.Digital Access Springer 2015 - ArticleGray EG, Westrum LE.Cell Tissue Res. 1979 Jun 27;199(2):281-8.Using a special albumin technique, nodes of Ranvier have been examined within frog skeletal muscle, sciatic nerve and rat and frog cerebrum. Initial segments have been examined in cerebrum of frog and rat. Mictotubules usually run longitudinally through these regions, but within the bare area of the intramuscular node of Ranvier, annular or helical bundles of microtubules run in a marginal band at right angles to the more centrally placed longitudinal microtubules. These nodal bare areas show a pronounced convexity and it is suggested that the annular microtubules serve to maintain this convexity during muscle contraction.