Extremities (Anatomy) -- Examination : Clinical evaluation of static and dynamic malalignments : techniques for assessment interventions / presented by Anh-Dung "Yum" Nguyen, Michelle C. Boling, David Bell and Melissa Montgomery
2010
1
Extremities (Anatomy) -- Fractures. : Emergency orthopedics : the extremities / Robert R. Simon, Scott C. Sherman, Steven J. Koenigsknecht ; with illustrations by Susan Gilbert
Extremities (Anatomy) -- Reimplantation : Extremity replantation : a comprehensive clinical guide / A. Neil Salyapongse, Samuel O. Poore, Ahmed M. Afifi, Michael L. Bentz, editors
2014
1
Extremities (Anatomy) Surgery -- See Also the narrower term Limb salvage
Extremities -- innervation : Anatomical guide for the electromyographer : the limbs and trunk / by Edward F. Delagi [and others] ; illustrated by Phyllis B. Hammond, Aldo O. Perotto, and Hugh Thomas
Extremities -- Magnetic resonance imaging -- Atlases : Pocket atlas of sectional anatomy. Vol. 3, Spine, extremities, joints : computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging / by Torsten B. Moeller and Emil Reif ; translated by Barbara Herzberger ; illustrator, Barbara Gay
2007
1
Extremities -- Magnetic resonance imaging -- Handbooks, manuals, etc : Pocket atlas of sectional anatomy. Vol. 3, Spine, extremities, joints : computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging / by Torsten B. Moeller and Emil Reif ; translated by Barbara Herzberger ; illustrator, Barbara Gay
Extremities -- ultrasonography. : Ultrasonography in vascular diseases : a practical approach to clinical problems / [edited by] Edward I. Bluth ... [and others]
A common interstitial lung disease caused by hypersensitivity reactions of PULMONARY ALVEOLI after inhalation of and sensitization to environmental antigens of microbial, animal, or chemical sources. The disease is characterized by lymphocytic alveolitis and granulomatous pneumonitis
A common interstitial lung disease caused by hypersensitivity reactions of PULMONARY ALVEOLI after inhalation of and sensitization to environmental antigens of microbial, animal, or chemical sources. The disease is characterized by lymphocytic alveolitis and granulomatous pneumonitis
One of the mechanisms by which CELL DEATH occurs (compare with NECROSIS and AUTOPHAGOCYTOSIS). Apoptosis is the mechanism responsible for the physiological deletion of cells and appears to be intrinsically programmed. It is characterized by distinctive morphologic changes in the nucleus and cytoplasm, chromatin cleavage at regularly spaced sites, and the endonucleolytic cleavage of genomic DNA; (DNA FRAGMENTATION); at internucleosomal sites. This mode of cell death serves as a balance to mitosis in regulating the size of animal tissues and in mediating pathologic processes associated with tumor growth