10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HETEROPLASTIES»
Discover the use of
heteroplasties in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
heteroplasties and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
International Abstracts of Surgery
Of these cases two are autoplasties, 6 are homoplasties, and 24 are
heteroplasties. The author rejects most of these reports for want of sufficient data
and reduces the total number to 14— : autoplasty, 3 homoplasties, ro
heteroplasties.
2
Chambers concise dictionary
... a word which has the same spelling as another, but has a different
pronunciation and meaning, such as lead (see LEAD1 and LEAD2). [17c:
HETERO- + Greek onyma name] heteroplasty /'hEtarouplasti/ >n (heteroplasties)
surgery a repair ...
3
Science and Selection: Essays on Biological Evolution and ...
... and across species on planet Earth. The striking similarities in distributions of
responses on a particular schedule in different operant lineages may be viewed
as behavioral heteroplasties. That is, selecting environments having particular ...
4
Transactions of the American Surgical Association
Heteroplasties and the insertion of foreign material are doomed to disappear
from this field of work, as foreign absorbable material, if aseptic, must eventually
be supplanted by connective tissue; and while a flexible joint may be present, ...
American Surgical Association,
1914
... roentgenopaque enterogastrone heathenishness Henley-on-Thames Shemini
Atseres inapprehensive apprehensively hyperventilate heteroplasties
overemphasises overemphasizes unapprehensive AEEEHINSSSTUVX
AEEEIIINNPRSTT ...
Justin Crozier, Cormac McKeown,
2006
... be applied to man, and he is ot opinion that for man the human cornea must be
used, for, although Wolfe-Schaler, O'Meare, and others advise the employment of
the dog's cornea, most experimenters deny the possibility of heteroplasties.
... operation, autoplastics or heteroplasties, where the diseased tissues are
replaced by healthy ones, either by the sliding of a flap or the grafting of human
or animal mucosa or skin, is the most rational but the most difficult to do. For two
years ...
8
Transactions of the Ophthalmological Society of the United ...
... having observed panophthalmitis after homoplasty in man, went back to his
heteroplasties (1878, 1886, 1887) but his results were poor. It was only in 1888
that he achieved a further step forward by substituting partial, non-perforating, ...
9
Transactions of the American Ophthalmological Society Annual ...
The division of the grafts into autoplastic, homoplastic, or heteroplastic has no
absolute value— certain heteroplasties evolve clinically as the best autoplasties.
The grafts which are assimilable act as a framework for tissue replacement, ...
The insertion of foreign material or heteroplasties are doomed to disappear from
this field of work, as experience has shown that foreign absorbable material, if
aseptic, must eventually be supplanted by connective tissue ; while a flexible flail
...
J. D. White, John Hugh McQuillen, George Jacob Ziegler,
1916