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- BookYoshiharu Sakai, editor.Contents:
Chapter 1 Principles of Anatomy
Chapter 2 Evidence of Laparoscopic Surgery for Colorectal Cancer
Chapter 3 Right-sided Colectomy (ileo-cecal resection, right-hemicolectomy, extended right-hemicolectomy)
Chapter 4 Transverse Colectomy
Chapter 5 Left Sided Colectomy (mobilization of splenic, sigmoidectomy)
Chapter 6 Laparoscopic Total Mesorectal Excision (TME) for Rectal Cancer
Chapter 7 Procedures of Right Lateral Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection (LPLND) with Pelvic Autonomic Nerve Preservation
Chapter 8 Restorative Proctocolectomy
Chapter 9 Transanal Minimally Invasive Surgery for Rectal Cancer
Chapter 10 Robotic Total Mesorectal Excision.Digital Access Springer 2016 - ArticleHansen RJ, Switzer RL, Hinze H, Holzer H.Biochim Biophys Acta. 1977 Jan 24;496(1):103-14.In Saccharomyces cerevisiae harvested from early exponential growth on glucose-containing media, the specifc activities of proteinases A and B, carboxypeptidase Y, and the inhibitors IA, IB, IC of these three proteinases, respectively, are found to be 10-30% of the specific activities observed in media without glucose, containing acetate as a carbon source; the activities of two aminopeptidases in glucose-grown cells were 30-50% of those in acetate-grown cells. In contrast to fructose-biphosphatase, phosoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, and cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase, which are inactivated after the addition of glucose to derepressed cells, the proteinases and inhibitors are not inactivated after glucose addition, but appear to be repressed. Growth of the yeast on poor nitrogen sources or starvation for nitrogen results in 2-3 fold increases in the levels of most proteinases and peptidases, but this effect is not observed with glucose as the carbon source.