Limit search to available items
Add Marked to Bag Add All On Page Add Marked to My Lists
Num Mark Subjects (1-10 of 10) Year Entries
23 Found
1 Heparin.   11
2  

Heparin-Binding Growth Factor Receptor -- See Receptors, Fibroblast Growth Factor


Specific molecular sites or structures on cell membranes that react with FIBROBLAST GROWTH FACTORS (both the basic and acidic forms), their analogs, or their antagonists to elicit or to inhibit the specific response of the cell to these factors. These receptors frequently possess tyrosine kinase activity
  1
3 Heparin -- physiology : Chemistry and biology of heparin and heparan sulfate / edited by Hari G. Garg, Robert J. Linhardt and Charles A. Hales  2005 1
4 Heparin -- Side effects   2
5  

Heparin Sodium -- See Heparin


A highly acidic mucopolysaccharide formed of equal parts of sulfated D-glucosamine and D-glucuronic acid with sulfaminic bridges. The molecular weight ranges from six to twenty thousand. Heparin occurs in and is obtained from liver, lung, mast cells, etc., of vertebrates. Its function is unknown, but it is used to prevent blood clotting in vivo and vitro, in the form of many different salts
  1
6 Heparin -- therapeutic use   3
7  

Heparin, Unfractionated -- See Heparin


A highly acidic mucopolysaccharide formed of equal parts of sulfated D-glucosamine and D-glucuronic acid with sulfaminic bridges. The molecular weight ranges from six to twenty thousand. Heparin occurs in and is obtained from liver, lung, mast cells, etc., of vertebrates. Its function is unknown, but it is used to prevent blood clotting in vivo and vitro, in the form of many different salts
  1
8 Héparine. : Heparin-binding proteins / H. Edward Conrad  1998 1
9 Héparines. : Heparin-binding proteins / H. Edward Conrad  1998 1
10  

Heparinic Acid -- See Heparin


A highly acidic mucopolysaccharide formed of equal parts of sulfated D-glucosamine and D-glucuronic acid with sulfaminic bridges. The molecular weight ranges from six to twenty thousand. Heparin occurs in and is obtained from liver, lung, mast cells, etc., of vertebrates. Its function is unknown, but it is used to prevent blood clotting in vivo and vitro, in the form of many different salts
  1
Add Marked to Bag Add All On Page Add Marked to My Lists