10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «GLIOSIS» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
gliosis in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
gliosis im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Diseases of the Brain, Head & Neck, Spine 2012-2015: ...
FLAIR sequences are useful for detecting nonhemorrhagic lesions and areas of
gliosis. GRE or SWI T2*-weighted sequences are used to detect the susceptibility
effects of hemosiderin. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and tractography may ...
Jürg Hodler, Gustav K. von Schulthess, Christoph Zollikofer, 2012
2
The Washington Manual of Surgical Pathology
The regions affected by chronic gliosis are usually firm and appear fibrillary on
histology. Gliosis resulting from Purkinje cell loss (cerebellum) is termed
Bergmann's gliosis and is characterized by parallel fibrillary processes radiating
through ...
Peter A. Humphrey, Louis P. Dehner, John D. Pfeifer, 2008
3
Cerebrospinal Fluid Collections
Figure 21. A) Multicystic encephalomalacia following neonatal encephalitis. Axial
T1-. second trimester result in smooth-walled, CSF- filled cavities, and no
surrounding gliosis. The CT and MRI appearances of tissue forming the margins
of this ...
4
Atlas of Fundus Angiography
8.3 Macular Pucker Werner Inhoffen Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, and
Clinical Presentation • The epiretinal development of gliosis in the macula, with
distortion of the retina and resulting dysfunction, is known as idiopathic epiretinal
gliosis ...
Heinrich Heimann, Ulrich Kellner, Michael H. Foerster, 2006
5
Advanced Therapy in Epilepsy
In our cases, neuronal loss and chronic gliosis are seen but are not selective for
either the basolateral or the corticomedial portions of the amygdala. The
pathologic findings are usually not confined to the amygdala, but gliosis and
neuronal ...
James W. Wheless, James Willmore, Roger A. Brumback, 2009
6
Neuropsychological Neurology: The Neurocognitive Impairments ...
2.2.5 Progressive subcortical gliosis (of Neumann) The term progressive
subcortical gliosis (PSG) was first suggested by Neumann and Cohn (1967) to
describe a rare dementing disorder with typical histopathological findings,
namely ...
GLiAL FIBRILLARY ACIDIC PROTEIN IN REACTIVE GLIOSIS Astroglia in the
CNS and peripheral nervous system (PNS) react to injury by hypertrophy and,
some cases, by proliferation. The functions of reactive astroglia are still not well ...
Helmut Kettenmann, Bruce R. Ransom, 2005
8
Magnetic Resonance in Dementia: 14 Tables
Familial progressive subcortical gliosis. Neurology, 1994; 44: 1633-1643 Lanska
DJ, Markesbery WR, Cochran E, Bennett D, Lanska MJ, Cohen M. Late-onset
sporadic progressive subcortical gliosis. J Neurol Sci, 1998; 157: 143-147 Mann
...
Jaap Valk, Frederik Barkhof, Philip Scheltens, 2002
9
CT of the Head and Spine
Other studies: MRI is more sensitive than CT for demonstrating gliosis and blood
breakdown products. Checklist for scan interpretation: ^ Atrophy? > Parenchymal
defects, circumscribed atrophy? > Gliosis, other residua (blood breakdown ...
Norbert Hosten, Thomas Liebig, 2011
10
Cerebral Cortex: Neurodegenerative and age-related changes ...
A rare cause of dementia is progressive subcortical gliosis (PSG). Neumann (
1949) and later Neumann and Cohen (1967) described the neuropathology of
five cases of a unique, progressive dementia that they called progressive
subcortical ...
Alan Peters, John H. Morrison, Edward G. Jones, 1999
10 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «GLIOSIS» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
gliosis im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
Astrocytes promote glioma invasion via the gap junction protein …
(b) Reduced coupling in the gliosis region adjacent to the tumor border in Cx43-null (Nestin-Cre:Cx43fl/fl) brain slice. Dye coupling assay was ... «Nature.com, Jul 15»
Neuropathologic analysis of Tyr69His TTR variant meningovascular …
Subpial TTR amyloid deposits were associated with brisk superficial reactive gliosis and siderosis in the neocortex and cerebellar cortex. «7thSpace Interactive, Jul 15»
Visual signs and symptoms in patients with the visual variant of …
Etiologies of PCA include Alzheimer's disease (AD), corticobasal degeneration, dementia with Lewy bodies, subcortical gliosis, and prion ... «BMC Blogs Network, Jun 15»
Wild type human TDP-43 potentiates ALS-linked mutant TDP-43 …
Neuronal loss and reactive gliosis was observed in the spinal cord and layer V region of the cortex, with TDP-43, ubiquitin and p62 cytoplasmic ... «7thSpace Interactive, Jun 15»
No C9ORF72, No Problem: Knockout Mouse Neurologically OK
When the researchers examined their tissues, they observed the usual number and size of spinal motor neurons, no signs of gliosis, and ... «Alzforum, Jun 15»
Schizophrenia: It's Not Just About Dopamine
2014;71:1323-1331. 4. Schnieder TP, Dwork AJ. Searching for neuropathology: gliosis in schizophrenia. Biol Psychiatry. 2011;69:134-139. 5. «Psychiatric Times, Mai 15»
Wild-type microglia do not reverse pathology in mouse models of …
... wild-type and Mecp2tm1.1Jae/y brains, and a lack of gliosis, cell loss, cellular debris, microglia or macrophages in Mecp2tm1.1Jae/y brains. «Nature.com, Mai 15»
Experts Gain Ground in CTE Diagnosis
For instance, the involvement of the spinal cord, neuronal cell loss, gliosis, inflammation, and hemosiderin deposition, are unknown. Also, there ... «MedPage Today, Apr 15»
What We Know About the NFL's Bogeyman, CTE
This deposition leads to neuronal death and gliosis (think of this as brain scarring). Remember, tau protein stabilizes microtubules, and ... «VICE, Mär 15»
New 'miracle' stem cell therapy reverses multiple sclerosis
Damaged areas undergo gliosis (scarring). Lesions or scars (called plaques) may be scattered throughout the central nervous system. «Digital Journal, Mär 15»