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- Bookprepared by the Program Area Committee on Medical Care Administration, American Public Health Association.Contents:
v. 1. Concepts and principles.--
v. 2. Medical care appraisal. - ArticleGreaves MF, Falk JA, Falk RE.Scand J Immunol. 1975 Sep;4(5-6):555-62.Antisera have been raised in rabbits aginst human peritoneal macrophages. After absorption with tonsil cells the sera reacted, by direct and indirect immunfluorescence, with phagocytic mononuclear cells from a variety of tissues and, in addition, stained a small population of nonphagocytic non-T, non-B mononuclear cells present in blood, spleen, and marrow but absent or very rare in tonsil and thymus. The antisera may define a human monocyte-macrophage cell surface differentiation antigen (HuMA) and can be used to deplete or enrich reactive cell population.