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Biopolymere   8
Biopolymeren. : Green plastics : an introduction to the new science of biodegradable plastics / E.S. Stevens  2002 1
Biopolymères. : Novel macromolecules in food systems / edited by G. Doxastakis and V. Kiosseoglou  2000 1
Biopolymères -- Propriétés thermiques. : The physical chemistry of biopolymer solutions : application of physical techniques to the study of proteins and nuclei acids / Robert F. Steiner & Louise Garone  1991 1
  Biopolymers -- 10 Related Subjects   10
Biopolymers.   168
Biopolymers -- Analysis.   5
Biopolymers -- Analysis -- Handbooks, manuals, etc : A handbook of applied biopolymer technology : synthesis, degradation and applications / edited by Sanjay K. Sharma, Ackmez Mudhoo  2011 1
Biopolymers -- Biodegradation : Synthetic biodegradable polymers / volume editors, Bernhard Rieger [and others] ; with contributions by M. Amann [and others]  2012 1
Biopolymers -- biosynthesis : Biological materials of marine origin : invertebrates / Hermann Ehrlich  2010 1
Biopolymers -- Biotechnology   11
Biopolymers -- Biotechnology -- Handbooks, manuals, etc : Handbook of Biopolymers and Biodegradable Plastics : Properties, Processing, and Applications / edited by Sina Ebnesajjad  2013 1
Biopolymers -- chemistry   6
Biopolymers -- Computer simulation : In-silico approaches to macromolecular chemistry / edited by Minu Elizabeth Thomas [and more]  2023 1
Biopolymers -- Congresses   7
Biopolymers -- Environmental aspects   2
Biopolymers -- Fieldwork : Micro/nanoencapsulation of active food ingredients / Qingrong Huang, editor, Peter Given, editor, Michael Qian, editor ; sponsored by the ACS Division of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, Inc  2009 1
Biopolymers -- Handbooks, manuals, etc   2
Biopolymers -- Industrial applications   13
Biopolymers -- Mathematics : Topology and geometry of biopolymers : AMS Special Session on Topology of Biopolymers, April 21-22, 2018, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts / Erica Flapan, Helen Wong, editors  2020 1
Biopolymers -- Mathematics -- Congresses : Topology and geometry of biopolymers : AMS Special Session on Topology of Biopolymers, April 21-22, 2018, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts / Erica Flapan, Helen Wong, editors  2020 1
Biopolymers -- Mechanical properties.   3
Biopolymers -- Periodicals   4
Biopolymers -- physiology   3
Biopolymers -- therapeutic use   7
Biopolymers -- Thermal properties : The physical chemistry of biopolymer solutions : application of physical techniques to the study of proteins and nuclei acids / Robert F. Steiner & Louise Garone  1991 1
 

Bioprinting -- See Also Guided Tissue Regeneration


Procedures for enhancing and directing tissue repair and renewal processes, such as BONE REGENERATION; NERVE REGENERATION; etc. They involve surgically implanting growth conducive tracks or conduits (TISSUE SCAFFOLDING) at the damaged site to stimulate and control the location of cell repopulation. The tracks or conduits are made from synthetic and/or natural materials and may include support cells and induction factors for CELL GROWTH PROCESSES; or CELL MIGRATION
  1
Bioprinting   9
Bioprinting -- methods   2
 

Bioprobe -- See Biosensing Techniques


Any of a variety of procedures which use biomolecular probes to measure the presence or concentration of biological molecules, biological structures, microorganisms, etc., by translating a biochemical interaction at the probe surface into a quantifiable physical signal
  1
  Bioprobes -- 2 Related Subjects   2
 

Bioprocess control -- See Biotechnological process control


  1
 

Bioprocess engineering -- See Biochemical engineering


  1
 

Bioprocess monitoring -- See Biotechnological process monitoring


  1
 

Bioproducts -- See Biological products


Here are entered works on products of biological origin as well as commercial products of biotechnology
  1
 

Bioprospecting -- See Also Drug Discovery


The process of finding chemicals for potential therapeutic use
  1
Bioprospecting. : Regulating bioprospecting : institutions for drug research, access, and benefit-sharing / Padmashree Gehl Sampath  2005 1
Bioprospecting -- ethics : Insider trading : how mortuaries, medicine and money have built a global market in human cadaver parts / Naomi Pfeffer  2017 1
Bioprospektion   2
 

Bioprostheses -- See Bioprosthesis


Prosthesis, usually heart valve, composed of biological material and whose durability depends upon the stability of the material after pretreatment, rather than regeneration by host cell ingrowth. Durability is achieved 1, mechanically by the interposition of a cloth, usually polytetrafluoroethylene, between the host and the graft, and 2, chemically by stabilization of the tissue by intermolecular linking, usually with glutaraldehyde, after removal of antigenic components, or the use of reconstituted and restructured biopolymers
  1
 

Bioprostheses, Heterograft -- See Bioprosthesis


Prosthesis, usually heart valve, composed of biological material and whose durability depends upon the stability of the material after pretreatment, rather than regeneration by host cell ingrowth. Durability is achieved 1, mechanically by the interposition of a cloth, usually polytetrafluoroethylene, between the host and the graft, and 2, chemically by stabilization of the tissue by intermolecular linking, usually with glutaraldehyde, after removal of antigenic components, or the use of reconstituted and restructured biopolymers
  1
 

Bioprostheses, Porcine Xenograft -- See Bioprosthesis


Prosthesis, usually heart valve, composed of biological material and whose durability depends upon the stability of the material after pretreatment, rather than regeneration by host cell ingrowth. Durability is achieved 1, mechanically by the interposition of a cloth, usually polytetrafluoroethylene, between the host and the graft, and 2, chemically by stabilization of the tissue by intermolecular linking, usually with glutaraldehyde, after removal of antigenic components, or the use of reconstituted and restructured biopolymers
  1
 

Bioprostheses, Xenograft -- See Bioprosthesis


Prosthesis, usually heart valve, composed of biological material and whose durability depends upon the stability of the material after pretreatment, rather than regeneration by host cell ingrowth. Durability is achieved 1, mechanically by the interposition of a cloth, usually polytetrafluoroethylene, between the host and the graft, and 2, chemically by stabilization of the tissue by intermolecular linking, usually with glutaraldehyde, after removal of antigenic components, or the use of reconstituted and restructured biopolymers
  1
 

Bioprosthesis -- See Also Transplants


Organs, tissues, or cells taken from the body for grafting into another area of the same body or into another individual
  1
Bioprosthesis : Aortic root surgery : the biological solution / C.A. Yankah, Y. Weng, R. Hetzer, eds  2010 1
 

Bioprosthesis, Heterograft -- See Bioprosthesis


Prosthesis, usually heart valve, composed of biological material and whose durability depends upon the stability of the material after pretreatment, rather than regeneration by host cell ingrowth. Durability is achieved 1, mechanically by the interposition of a cloth, usually polytetrafluoroethylene, between the host and the graft, and 2, chemically by stabilization of the tissue by intermolecular linking, usually with glutaraldehyde, after removal of antigenic components, or the use of reconstituted and restructured biopolymers
  1
 

Bioprosthesis, Porcine Xenograft -- See Bioprosthesis


Prosthesis, usually heart valve, composed of biological material and whose durability depends upon the stability of the material after pretreatment, rather than regeneration by host cell ingrowth. Durability is achieved 1, mechanically by the interposition of a cloth, usually polytetrafluoroethylene, between the host and the graft, and 2, chemically by stabilization of the tissue by intermolecular linking, usually with glutaraldehyde, after removal of antigenic components, or the use of reconstituted and restructured biopolymers
  1
 

Bioprosthesis, Xenograft -- See Bioprosthesis


Prosthesis, usually heart valve, composed of biological material and whose durability depends upon the stability of the material after pretreatment, rather than regeneration by host cell ingrowth. Durability is achieved 1, mechanically by the interposition of a cloth, usually polytetrafluoroethylene, between the host and the graft, and 2, chemically by stabilization of the tissue by intermolecular linking, usually with glutaraldehyde, after removal of antigenic components, or the use of reconstituted and restructured biopolymers
  1
Biopsie   2
Biopsie du ganglion sentinelle. : Selective sentinel lymphadenectomy for human solid cancer / edited by Stanley P.L. Leong, Yuko Kitagawa, Masaki Kitajima  2005 1
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