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  • Book
    Ismail Jatoi, John Benson, Hani Sbitany.
    Summary: This atlas describes various surgical techniques and incorporates both science and art into a unique transatlantic perspective for treatment of breast disease. The management of both benign and malignant disease is outlined with a detailed account of the diagnostic pathway and methods for obtaining definitive pre-operative diagnosis. All sections contain illustrations to demonstrate and clarify surgical and other practical procedures. Particular emphasis is placed on those techniques that consistently provide good cosmetic outcomes. This 2nd edition of the Atlas of Breast Surgery includes many new illustrations with important updates on innovations in surgical techniques. Many of the illustrations from the previous atlas have been preserved, with new illustrations to highlight important advances in surgical techniques since publication of the first edition. This atlas is intended as a guide for surgeons throughout the world who treat diseases of the breast, both benign and malignant. Atlas of Breast Surgery 2nd Edition serves as a valuable resource for qualified surgeons and trainees from general, plastic and gynecology backgrounds in the management of patients with all types of breast disease.

    Contents:
    Historical Overview of Breast Surgery
    Anatomy
    Diagnostic Pathways
    Surgery for benign breast disorders
    Surgery for Breast Cancer
    Plastic and Reconstructive Breast Surgery.
    Digital Access Springer 2020
  • Article
    Iasin AE, Barinskii IF, Reĭzis AR, Shubladze AK.
    Zh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol. 1978 Jun(6):110-4.
    The authors demonstrate possibilities of viral hepatitis diagnosis by means of fluorescent antisera labeled phiiTts. The antisera were obtained from the blood of convalescents after infectious hepatitis (with an uncomplicated course) on the 25th--30th day of the disease, and also from the placental gamma-globulin of persons who had had viral hepatitis (in the anamnesis). Both diagnostic preparations proved to be highly specific, although the first of them was somewhat more sensitive. Blood smears were stained with fluorescent antisera. The fluoresence was revealed in the cytoplasm of the white blood formed elements--lymphocytes and neutrophils; the nucleus was dark. Materials of this investigation permit experimental substantiation of a possibility of prolonged antigenemia in the blood leukocytes of patients suffering from viral hepatitis.
    Digital Access Access Options