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  • Book
    clinical editor, Patricia A. Slachta, PhD, RN, APRN, ACNS-BC, CWOCN, Clinical Nurse Specialist, Skin, Wound, Ostomy, the Queen's Medical Center, Honolulu, Hawaii.
    Summary: Get all the basics on wound care--the fundamental skills and science you need, in easy-to-remember ways, including: Skin anatomy and physiology in easy-to-follow terms; Basic wound care assessment, procedures, monitoring, and long-term care; The stages of wound healing; Wound and skin assessment tool.

    Contents:
    Wound care fundamentals / Carol Calianno
    Wound assessment and monitoring / Carol Calianno
    Basic wound care procedures / Kathy McLaughlin
    Acute wounds / Jody Scardillo
    Vascular ulcers / Missy Marineau
    Pressure ulcers / Tracey Siegel
    Diabetic foot ulcers / Missy Marineau
    Chronic wounds / Karen Zulkowski
    Wound care products / Joan Junkin
    Therapeutic modalities / Erin Fazzari
    Legal and reimbursement issues / Karen Zulkowski.
    Digital Access Ovid 2016
  • Article
    Maeno K, Yoshii S, Yoshida T, Iinuma M, Kawamoto Y.
    Microbiol Immunol. 1977;21(8):427-38.
    The intracellular development of membrane protein (MP) of influenza A virus was investigated by immunofluorescent staining. Monospecific antiserum was prepared by immunizing rabbits with MP eluted from SDS-polyacrylamide gels of SDS-disrupted NWS virions. In the productive infection in clone 1-5C-4 cells, MP antigen was first detected over the whole cell at 4 hr after infection, concomitantly with the appearance of hemagglutinin (HA) antigen in the cytoplasm, and bright nuclear fluorescence was then observed. Nucleoprotein (NP) antigen was detected in the nucleus prior to the appearance of fluorescence of MP antigen and thereafter the cytoplasmic fluorescence developed. Late in infection, all of these three antigens were observed predominantly in the cytoplasm with stronger fluorescence at the cell surface. Essentially similar findings were obtained in the abortive infections in L cells and BHK cells. The above results suggest that the membrane protein of influenza A virus is present in the nucleus as well as in the cytoplasm of infected cells.
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