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  • Book
    Monique Kornell ; with contributions by Thisbe Gensler, Naoko Takahatake, Erin Travers.
    Summary: "Focused on the intersection of science and art, this book explores themes of anatomy from the Renaissance to modern times"-- Provided by publisher.

    Contents:
    The Illustration of Anatomy / Monique Kornell
    The Living Dead: Animated Anatomy / Monique Kornell
    Artists and Anatomy Books / Monique Kornell
    Anatomy and the Antique / Monique Kornell
    "As Large as Nature": Life-Size Anatomical Illustration / Monique Kornell
    Surface Anatomy: From the Inside Out / Monique Kornell
    Restricted Access: The Body, Sex, and Reproduction in Frederik Ruysch's Anatomical Collection and Catalogs / Erin Travers
    Interior Visions: Representing the Body in Three Dimensions / Thisbe Gensler
    Catalog / Thisbe Gensler, Monique Kornell, Naoko Takahatake, and Erin Travers.
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    Books: History - LC Classification (Downstairs)
    NC760 .F59 2022
    1
  • Article
    Yagello M, Lespinats G, Fridman WH.
    Int J Cancer. 1978 Aug 15;22(2):136-41.
    The antibody response to sheep red blood cells of spleen cells from mice bearing a methylcholanthrene (MCA)-induced tumour was measured with the local hemolysis technique, after in vivo or in vitro immunization. The in vivo data varied according to the stage of tumour growth and were related to the splenomegaly developing during the tumour growth process. During the first 10--15 days after tumour grafting, the total number of plaque-forming cells in the spleen increase in proportion to the spleen growth and thereafter remained relatively constant although the splenomegaly still progressed. Experiments performed in vitro were used to test the antibody response of mixtures of cells from normal mice and syngeneic tumour-bearing animals. In most cases, no suppression of antibody production, due to cells from tumour-bearing hosts, could be detected. The results suggest that those cells, which suppress cell-mediated immune reactions, previously found in the spleen of animals bearing the MCA-induced tumour, do not suppress antibody production.
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