She said the charity is hoping to secure up to 500,000 donor names on its Bone Marrow Register. |
|
If you would like to register as a potential bone marrow donor on the British Bone Marrow Registry, you must also be a regular blood donor. |
|
A report on this study appears in the prepublication online edition of Bone Marrow Transplantation. |
|
The British Bone Marrow Registry, which is run by the National Blood Service, was formed in 1987 and works in conjunction with other UK donor registries. |
|
Hemophagocytic Syndrome in Miliary Tuberculosis Presenting with Noncaseating Granulomas in Bone Marrow and Liver. |
|
Currently people from these communities are under-represented on the blood and bone marrow donor registers. |
|
The bone marrow is also able to make other types of blood cells, such as red blood cells and platelets. |
|
Bone marrow is a spongy tissue inside certain bones of the body that produces blood cells. |
|
Bone marrow is found in soft fatty tissue inside bones, where red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets are produced and developed. |
|
They tried to give her a bone marrow transplant but her bones rejected every bone tissue that was given to her. |
|
As in our case, the severity of peripheral neutropenia did not correlate with the cellularity of the bone marrow myeloid compartment. |
|
The bone marrow was markedly hypocellular with leftshifted myeloid maturation. |
|
Some evidence indicates that in chronic myeloid leukaemia, bone marrow transplantation can prolong life if performed during its chronic phase. |
|
The journey from the bone marrow to vascular endothelium or myocardium is divided into stages. |
|
Bilateral bone marrow biopsies and a unilateral bone marrow aspiration were performed. |
|
As the new bone marrow also produces red cells and platelets, you are also at risk from anaemia and bleeding. |
|
Two laboratories collaborated in this project, one analysing bone marrow cells and the other analysing gut cells from the same animals. |
|
Like him, Alice is very brave and deserves a chance for a bone marrow transplant. |
|
Then a hollow needle is inserted into the bone, and a syringe is used to draw out the liquid-like bone marrow. |
|
Scientists have long known that bone marrow stem cells regenerate blood cells. |
|
|
Her battle with the disease included surviving two harrowing bone marrow transplants. |
|
Stem cells are harvested from bone marrow, umbilical cords, the brain and spinal cord and other tissues. |
|
The corrected reticulocyte index should be elevated in patients with an acute anemia but a competent bone marrow. |
|
Beth underwent a life saving bone marrow transplant when she was five after a mystery donor was found in Germany. |
|
All the blood cells are formed in the marrow of the flat bones such as the skull, breastbone and pelvis. |
|
In general, magnetic resonance is excellent for imaging soft tissue and bone marrow. |
|
His topic was the regeneration of damaged heart muscle, by use of bone marrow stem cells. |
|
White blood cells are produced by the bone marrow, the soft spongy centre of bones. |
|
It is usually found in the lymph nodes but can also spread to involve other organs such as the spleen and bone marrow. |
|
If you require a bone marrow transplant a compatible donor will need to be found. |
|
He donated bone marrow at a hospital in London before it was transported to America. |
|
During a transplant, healthy bone marrow will be fed into your blood stream. |
|
Autologous transplants are stem cells from the patient's own bone marrow or peripheral blood. |
|
The bone marrow cells will be collected using a needle and syringe, with no cutting or stitching involved. |
|
Stem cells have been isolated from the central nervous system, bone marrow, and blood of adults. |
|
I'll attempt to cull his posts down to the essential marrow and bring it to the attention of my own limited readership. |
|
Also, my account cannot be complete, but it will contain most of the essential marrow of our many conversations. |
|
He turned, chilled to the marrow, which was, evidently, a nastily foreign feeling. |
|
In the balmy hours of the night, I had almost forgotten what cold felt like. How it bores down to the marrow. |
|
And when you returned, wide-eyed with fright and chilled to the marrow, you were secretly amazed at your own survival. |
|
|
A professional to the marrow of his bones, he has left his mark on the cultural and artistic life of the country. |
|
Neither will you be chilled to the marrow by the icy blasts of winter, for it scarcely ever freezes. |
|
It sent a shiver down Nathaniel's spine and chilled his bones to the marrow. |
|
He is the very marrow of John Strathbourne as he was when we fought side by side. |
|
Bone marrow transplantation may be considered in some cases of sickle cell anemia, thalassemia, and aplastic anemia. |
|
You can munch on sweet and sour pork belly or Chinese steamed bao, or even smoked marrow on toast, just to name a few. |
|
Bearded vultures are the only living birds known to access bone marrow, which they do by dashing bones onto rocks from great heights. |
|
Chemotherapy and total-body radiation therapy given as part of a bone marrow transplant can cause diarrhea. |
|
Medical opinion holds that if the patient's body doesn't reject the bone marrow within five years, it is a perfect match. |
|
It spilled out from her fingers in the form of a fluid silver substance and flooded the man's leg down to the marrow of his bone. |
|
One, a 20 year old female, had deposits in the brain, liver, lung, bone marrow, adrenal glands, and ovaries. |
|
The bone marrow is responsible for formation of blood components such as the white blood cells and platelets. |
|
Tissues such as corneas, skin, bone, bone marrow, cartilage, tendons, veins, and fascia also can be transplanted successfully. |
|
The bone marrow was hypercellular with mildly increased eosinophils and plasma cells. |
|
To satisfy Pooka's need to chew, offer rawhide chew sticks or marrow bones. |
|
The spirit of psychoanalysis is not confined to the skin, flesh, bones and marrow of psychoanalysis, but it is also not apart from them. |
|
The lymph node and bone marrow biopsy specimens were tested by paraffin section immunohistochemistry. |
|
Chronic inhalation abuse may also cause bone marrow depression resulting in leukopenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia, leukemia, and hemolysis. |
|
It sparked a massive media appeal to find bone marrow donors for the four youngsters. |
|
Patients receiving total body irradiation for bone marrow transplant conditioning must also be considered at risk. |
|
|
These small, enucleate cells are produced from large parent cells, the megakaryocytes, in the bone marrow. |
|
Primary lymphoid organs in the thymus and bone marrow constitute the major site of lymphocyte development. |
|
The lymphatic system consists of lymph nodes and vessels, the thymus, spleen and bone marrow. |
|
Leukocytes are produced or stored in many locations throughout the body, including the thymus, spleen, and bone marrow. |
|
Megaloblastic anemia is characterized by the presence of megaloblasts in the bone marrow. |
|
She had megaloblastic changes in the bone marrow and chronic severe liver disease. |
|
Three of these children revealed megaloblastic changes in bone marrow aspiration though their serum vitamin B12 and folate levels were normal. |
|
Bone marrow biopsy material was acid decalcified prior to formalin fixation. |
|
But to do it requires strong devotion from the bottom of our heart and from the marrow of our bones. |
|
A team of intrepid roller skaters aim to cover 1,500 miles across Europe in aid of a bone marrow charity. |
|
But now his best chance of beating the disease is if a matching bone marrow donor can be found. |
|
Metastatic foci were also seen in the mesenteric lymph nodes, pancreas, stomach, visceral pleura, and bone marrow. |
|
Then we excavated the oily marrow with tiny wooden forks, dabbing little bits of it on slices of challah toast. |
|
After a second infusion, a few weeks later, all of the patients showed engraftment in one or more sites, including bone, skin and bone marrow. |
|
Case 2 involved a 3-year-old boy who received a mismatched unrelated bone marrow transplant for metachromatic leukodystrophy. |
|
The femoral marrow cells were flushed out with fetal bovine serum and smeared on clean slides. |
|
A widower, whose wife died from leukaemia last year, is appealing to people to join the bone marrow register on her birthday. |
|
The major parts of the system are the bone marrow, spleen, thymus gland, lymph nodes, and the tonsils. |
|
Other parts of the lymphatic system are the spleen, thymus, bone marrow and tonsils. |
|
Once the flowers have been pollinated and the fruit has begun to set, marrow plants require copious amounts of water. |
|
|
Some children show signs of good engraftment initially, but ultimately reject the donor marrow. |
|
They inject me with the new bone marrow and hopefully it will engraft and start to make new, healthy cells instead of cancerous ones. |
|
In a successful transplant the new bone marrow migrates to the cavities of the large bones, engrafts and begins producing normal blood cells. |
|
Many different tissues can be transplanted such as whole organs like the heart, or cells as in bone marrow transplantation. |
|
We report the case of a woman who had undergone a successful allogeneic bone marrow transplant for acute myeloid leukemia. |
|
You can donate blood, bone marrow, even kidneys and even part of your liver as a living donor. |
|
In 2 cases, a bone marrow trephine biopsy was also available for examination. |
|
They culled stem cells from the marrow and mixed them with a harmless virus in which a gene that makes the missing protein had been inserted. |
|
This anticipates a love of chitterlings, grilled pig's ears, marrow bones, stuffed trotters, kidneys and brains. |
|
The bone marrow was replaced by an infiltrate of blast cells with medium-sized nuclei, multiple nucleoli, and moderate amounts of cytoplasm. |
|
By implanting the bone marrow mononuclear cells, we deliver endothelial progenitor cells and vascular growth factors at the same time. |
|
In acute leukemias, the marrow is typically overpopulated with blast cells. |
|
Red blood cells are produced in the bone marrow and circulate in the bloodstream before they are broken down in the spleen. |
|
The BBMR is a division of the National Blood Service, which works in co-operation with the other UK bone marrow donor registries. |
|
Also during this time, the bone marrow suppressive effect of nitrogen mustard was discovered. |
|
Bone marrow smears were examined to determine the extent of genotoxicity after particular treatment times. |
|
Bone marrow derived cells were identified by the presence of the Y chromosome, ordinarily found only in males. |
|
However if the cord blood transplant had not been successful, they had a perfectly matched bone marrow donor in the person of Adam, the infant. |
|
Our present system of housing and caring for elders is declinist to the very marrow of its bones. |
|
Meticulously, and with obvious relish she worked the marrow out with her tongue. |
|
|
To serve, spoon some marrow bean vinaigrette in the center of a plate and drizzle some salsa verde around the dish. |
|
The discovery suggests that many other fossil bones may contain well-preserved remnants of bone marrow, the scientists say. |
|
A year ago today, she was undergoing a transatlantic bone marrow transplant in a last-ditch attempt to beat leukaemia. |
|
Like modern frogs, she says, the bones show an inner zone of yellow, fatty marrow, encircled by an outer zone of red marrow. |
|
Mum Allison is hoping to hear news today on whether or not she can donate bone marrow to Joshua. |
|
A side effect of such therapy is bone marrow suppression that adversely affects the patient's ability to generate hematopoiesis. |
|
The progenitors of osteoclasts are from the hematopoietic cell line and the osteoblasts originate from the marrow stroma. |
|
Typically, permineralization has filled most or all of the cavities of the bone including, in many cases, the marrow cavity. |
|
A gram-positive coccus was isolated from the bone marrow of a 5-year-old patient with leukemia. |
|
We do not know whether the tumor in the bone marrow represents a primary or metastatic process. |
|
It was also made into pemmican, a mixture of ground buffalo meat, service berries, and marrow grease. |
|
The remainder of the marrow showed a good hematopoietic reserve and slightly increased reticulin. |
|
An equivalent number of reticulocytes are released daily from the bone marrow. |
|
It uses genetic fingerprinting to identify tiny leukaemia cells from a sample of bone marrow. |
|
At the moment he has cabbages, mielies, onions, Chinese cabbage, baby marrow, Cape gooseberry, spanspek and cherry tomatoes. |
|
It is in a critical stage and the only way to save her is through a relatively harmless bone marrow transplant. |
|
The tumor disseminated early to the lungs, lymph nodes, bone marrow, and spleen and ran a fulminant course. |
|
Cord blood, from the umbilical cord and placenta, contains cells which can provide an alternative to bone marrow transplants. |
|
The stem cells were harvested from the patient's own bone marrow and injected into the ventricle. |
|
A similar situation has been noted in paediatric oncology, with a lower than expected number of referrals for bone marrow transplant. |
|
|
She carried a heavy workload, much involved in paediatric oncology and the early days of bone marrow transplantation. |
|
I would say that to be able to give this marrow is just absolutely nothing compared to what he's going through, and my heart goes out to him. |
|
Bone marrow collection is a surgical procedure performed in an operating room. |
|
The bruising went right through to my marrow bone and every time I struck the ball I felt pain. |
|
There is usually scant osteoblastic or osteoclastic activity, and often there is a marrow component with fat or hematopoietic elements. |
|
The myeloid lineage gives rise to the rest of the white blood cells or leukocytes, which all derive from the bone marrow in adults. |
|
Then we're going to cut into your hip and take marrow from what's called your iliac bone, basically just your upper hip bone. |
|
Cells are aspirated from the bone marrow of the crest of the hip bone using a needle and syringe with local anesthesia. |
|
This requires a bone marrow examination from the crest of the hip bone using local anesthesia. |
|
Use of this test requires the availability of a histologist who is specially trained in marrow histology. |
|
In people with leukemia, the bone marrow produces a large number of abnormal white blood cells. |
|
He's going to have a good chew on the marrow and it gives him something to hold, he said. |
|
Some bones also bear evidence that hominins used fist-sized stones to break them open to acquire bone marrow. |
|
Peripheral blood stem cell or bone marrow transplantation often leads to chimerism, wherein the patient possesses a mixed cell population. |
|
This is performed under general or spinal anaesthetic and some marrow is removed from your own or a donor's hip bone using a syringe and needle. |
|
Short-term effects of IV-CPA pulses include bone marrow suppression and significant hyperemesis. |
|
Benzene is especially noxious, with the ability to cause bone marrow cancer and leukemia. |
|
There are two basic reasons for carrying out bone marrow transplantation for leukaemia and lymphoma. |
|
When a child has leukemia, large numbers of abnormal white blood cells are produced in the bone marrow. |
|
In emaciated animals, serous atrophy occurs at these depot sites and in the bone marrow cavity. |
|
|
This does not affect the egression of cells from the bone marrow into the blood. |
|
The bone marrow was re-evaluated at the second relapse by morphology, morphometry, DNA ploidy, flow cytometry, and cytogenetics. |
|
Today, she is desperately fighting for her life in hospital and a bone marrow transplant is the only thing that could cure her. |
|
Teeth from a woolly rhino were also found, with a reindeer antler and a deer bone that had been split to extract the marrow. |
|
Because this disease is virtually always fatal due to the profound bone marrow aplasia, management is not well defined and is rarely successful. |
|
Patients undergoing such treatment are at high risk for bone marrow aplasia. |
|
We are appealing for healthy people to volunteer to undergo a blood test to see if their bone marrow would be suitable. |
|
Any tissue can be biopsied, including the liver, lung, brain and bone marrow. |
|
In vivo cytogenetic studies suggested the induction of chromosome damage in Chinese hamster bone marrow cells. |
|
Just make sure you have a suitably long implement with which to scrape out the marrow so you can spread it on some toast. |
|
I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life. |
|
The bone marrow is also hypercellular with varying amounts of granulocytic and erythroid hyperplasia. |
|
To confirm a suspected second relapse, a bone marrow aspirate and core biopsy were performed. |
|
After synthesis in the bone marrow, they migrate to the systemic circulation and on to the lung. |
|
For example, leukemia is a cancer that involves blood, bone marrow, the lymphatic system and the spleen but doesn't form a single mass or tumor. |
|
There is a generalized infection with involvement of the liver, spleen, bone marrow, and lymph glands. |
|
He was rushed to Balboa, where doctors began extensive tests, including a lymph node and bone marrow biopsy. |
|
Bone marrow cells exhibited chromosome aberrations, aneuploidy, and changes in the mitotic index. |
|
If you are not able to have an autologous transplant, the doctors will try to find a bone marrow donor for an allogenic transplant. |
|
What's much safer is an autologous transplant where a person's own stem cells are harvested either from their blood or bone marrow. |
|
|
If you have had an autologous transplant, your body will not reject the bone marrow. |
|
In the EU, approximately 13,000 cancer patients undergo autologous bone marrow transplant each year. |
|
The concept that autologous bone marrow stem cells target a specific organ and replace diseased cells is particularly attractive. |
|
The quaestuary preachers drain the very blood and marrow of the poor simple people. |
|
Bone marrow and axillary lymph node biopsies both contained mixed cellularity Hodgkin lymphoma. |
|
He said the five products included baby carrot, baby squash, baby corn, baby marrow and asparagus. |
|
Similarly, workup of the bone marrow for lymphoma and plasma cell malignancies is aided by immunophenotyping. |
|
The term refers to any of a group of malignant diseases of the bone marrow and other bone forming organs. |
|
Divide veal, scallions, Brussels sprouts, sake, bone marrow and bouillon into four bowls. |
|
Just weeks before competition, she donated bone marrow to her critically ill brother. |
|
The iliac crest bone marrow biopsy is the gold standard for detecting of bone marrow metastases in small cell lung cancer. |
|
The slowly braised veal shank fell off the bone, its marrow, creamily unctuous. |
|
Humans may have learned about what a high fat, high protein meal the marrow was from the hyenas, who could crush bones with their jaws. |
|
So, whether you call it a striped gourd, a marrow, or a zucchini, you might notice that they are quite plentiful at this time of the year. |
|
In some cases you may be able to exchange cards or letters with the person who received your donated bone marrow. |
|
The bone marrow helps regulate the number of white blood cells in the body. |
|
Autologous bone marrow transplantation was being viewed in a different light. |
|
Overall it is very well tolerated, with a low incidence of bone marrow suppression. |
|
Stem cells are cells taken from bone marrow which have the ability to grow into several different types of tissue. |
|
Definitive treatment of the disorder relies on reconstituting the patient's bone marrow. |
|
|
For this reason, close relatives are often the donors of choice in bone marrow transplantation. |
|
In other areas, such as blood and bone marrow donation, living donors are the norm. |
|
His sister was found to be the one-in-a-million bone marrow match he needed. |
|
In the process she has faced round after round of blood transfusions and radical hospital treatment to negate the effects of the illness that is destroying her bone marrow. |
|
At the end of the antimonial therapy, the bone marrow aspirate did not show any L-D bodies or malarial parasites, and there was no residual lymphadenopathy. |
|
The meeting followed years of campaigning by the parents after their daughters were diagnosed with severe blood disorders that required bone marrow transplants. |
|
In this disease, which occurs when a child inherits from both parents a particular mutation in a single gene, bone marrow fails to produce enough blood components. |
|
You explained that Alice has a very rare tissue type and that, although efforts continue, searches of the bone marrow registries worldwide have not so far found a good match. |
|
The patient underwent a staging workup that included computed tomography scans of the chest and abdomen and bilateral bone marrow biopsies and aspirates. |
|
Evaluation of the bone marrow revealed a small monoclonal population of cytoplasmic kappa light chain-restricted plasma cells in an otherwise normocellular marrow. |
|
Mr. Thoreau wanted to drive life into a corner, to live deep and suck out all the marrow. |
|
After five or six days in hospital Kim was diagnosed with severe aplastic anaemia which is a failure of the bone marrow to produce blood cells and platelets. |
|
To our knowledge, this is the first reported case in which florid parvovirus infection and subsequent recovery was documented by sequential bone marrow examination. |
|
He is the essence, the lifeblood, the very marrow of the team. |
|
Human bone marrow is a tissue of complex architectural organization, which includes granulopoietic loci, erythroblastic islets, and lymphocytic nodules. |
|
He wisely sifted out four steps which he discerned to be those which contained the essential marrow, and which were of the highest value in actual practice. |
|
The first bunches of asparagus, the early strawberries and runner beans, the green and cream stripes of the marrow all signpost the changing seasons for the cook. |
|
In lieu of bone marrow transplants, scientists hope to use stem cells to serve as the future vectors of mutant CCR5 proteins. |
|
We know also that a primitive marrow stem cell, or blood vessel wall cells mobilised from marrow, are able to repair heart muscle after damage from infarction. |
|
Although the extension of infection appeared to be primarily direct, lesions suggesting hematogenous dissemination were occasionally noted in bone marrow and skin. |
|
|
If the results are abnormal, you may be referred to a hematologist, a doctor who specializes in diagnosing and treating bone marrow and blood disorders. |
|
Increasingly senior educational roles were capped by 18 years as staff development instructor in oncology, haematology and bone marrow transplant. |
|
Further tests, including a bone marrow sample for leukaemia, failed to confirm a diagnosis but the illness was linked to a rare from of pure red blood cell aplasia. |
|
The night provides the vital marrow for all things creative. |
|
Under normal conditions of hemopoiesis, the bone marrow acts as a site for the turnover and traffic of mature leukocytes to the peripheral circulation. |
|
I mean, bone marrow transplants and heart transplants and neonatal ICUs are kind of a big deal, no? |
|
In August 2012, anchor Robin Roberts took a leave of absence for a bone marrow transplant. |
|
The bone marrow, which is in the cavity present in the center of bones, is the organ responsible for the production of red blood cells, white cells and platelets. |
|
The percentages of aneuploid bone marrow leukocytes were higher than those of aneuploid sperm for the two upper THH dose groups and for the positive control group. |
|
I wouldn't mind if they had a little nibble now and then, but no, they've got to have the whole thing. 2 pumpkin plants, 3 lettuce seedlings and damage to my marrow plant. |
|
The decalcification process did not affect the immunodetection with CD10 since positive reactivity was noted in decalcified bone marrow core biopsies. |
|
The histologic, cytochemical, and immunohistochemical features resembled a carcinoid tumor, and metastasis to the bone marrow was considered initially. |
|
Finally, when the two workers, frozen to the marrow, emerged from beneath the water, they were stunned to hear the student spectators burst into side-splitting laughter. |
|
Bone marrow transplants are a common form of stem cell transplantation. |
|
Multiple myeloma is a hematological malignant neoplasm of the bone marrow. |
|
Lethally irradiated mice were grafted with the bone marrow cells. |
|
The bone marrow of the dead soldiers was depleted dramatically, and their lymph nodes had shriveled away. |
|
He died after a second bone marrow transplant could not cure the disease. |
|
The stem cells came from Hannah's bone marrow, extracted with a special needle inserted into her hip bone. |
|
By Election Day, I had been through a bone marrow transplant and was on the mend. |
|
|
As stated, a bone marrow biopsy was negative for plasma cell dyscrasia in our case, which further supports the diagnosis of a localized plasmacytoma. |
|
Before a transplant takes place, the patient's abnormal bone marrow is destroyed through total body radiation, in combination with the drug cyclophosphamide. |
|
For, as the poet Bialik said in another context, it is we who will pay the price of the blaze with our blood and marrow. |
|
Iron staining of the bone marrow aspirate revealed increased storage iron. |
|
Unlike donors of vital organs like kidneys, marrow donors can give again and again. |
|
And then he was bursting through the main door, the chill late-afternoon wind throwing snowflakes against his sweat-streaked face and chilling him to the marrow. |
|
Lymphocytes increase in number until normal marrow cells are crowded out. |
|
Even mammals have nucleated red blood cells in their bone marrow. |
|
Nearby a survivor screamed, chilling them all to the marrow. |
|
In a recent study in Nature Medicine, normal bone marrow derived cells that were infused into patients suffering from osteogenesis imperfecta, a genetic disease. |
|
The study also represents the first successful animal model for studying how stem cells from human bone marrow and umbilical cord blood might be used to treat liver disease. |
|
The safety profile of the formulation is generally favorable, with no demonstrable ototoxicity, nephrotoxicity, bone marrow suppression, or cardiovascular adverse effects. |
|
Remove stylet and confirm placement by aspirating back marrow. |
|
A bag containing the retrovirus was connected to a bag of his bone marrow. |
|
He came to the face of operations. 'How's things here, marrow?' he asked. |
|
Mind you, he was a smart man, my father. None his marrow when it came to making an old mare look as young and lifey as a two-year-old, tarring its grey hairs. |
|
As well as the polymorphs and macrophages, there are cells that do not originate in the bone marrow, nor travel in the bloodstream, which can also act as phagocytes. |
|
Those times when I realize I am alone with myself and my thoughts I do take the time to suck the marrow out of it. |
|
He needs more chemo, plus radiation, and a bone marrow transplant. |
|
Many patients with leukemia only have blast cells in their bone marrow. |
|
|
Then normal bone marrow cells, donated from a close relative or carefully removed from the person's own bone marrow, are infused into the bloodstream with a drip. |
|
In contrast, autologous transplants usually result in relapse within one year, due to residual disease in the patient, or in the bone marrow preparation. |
|
At that time, she faced a race against time to find a bone marrow donor who matched her rare blood type, after being diagnosed with chronic myeloid leukaemia. |
|
Herein, we report a case of monoclonal B-cell proliferation involving lymph nodes, bone marrow, and peripheral blood in a patient with Whipple disease. |
|
The results of a computed tomography of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis performed after surgery as well as the results of a bone marrow biopsy were negative. |
|
I have been told that the marrow from older cattle is invariably of the hard and tallowy type at room-temperature, with younger cattle having softer marrow, overall. |
|
Living on the edge of precipices, it will raise skeletons high into the sky, dash them onto the rocks, and then extract the marrow with its curved beak. |
|
The vital marrow was packed in ice for the flight from the USA and given to Mr Worral to help him fight the myeloid leukaemia he was diagnosed with in September. |
|
When performing microarrays to evaluate leukemias, normal and leukemic cells found in blood or bone marrow are first separated by density gradient centrifugation. |
|
A bone marrow biopsy can rule out other chronic myeloid disorders. |
|
For bone marrow transplantation, to get a stem cell transplant to work, you need to treat the host with lethal doses of preparative irradiation, which has severe side effects. |
|
In a murine model of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation the drug was shown to improve survival outcomes in mice. |
|
The Humr people of Sudan consume the drink Umm Nyolokh, which is created from the liver and marrow of giraffes. |
|
If the marrow in one's backbone should melt, it would be sartin to run out at the tip of one's tail. |
|
Most of the beef and horse leg bones were found split lengthways, to get out the marrow. |
|
Lymphadenoid tissue includes the lymph glands, spleen, bone marrow, and tonsils, and the lymphatic tissue of the organs and mucous membranes. |
|
The finest European vegetables, cabbages, cauliflowers, potatoes, vegetable marrow, were lying in the market-hall, awaiting purchasers. |
|
He returned to London, where he was diagnosed with an inoperable prostate cancer, which had spread to his bone marrow. |
|
Isotopes and compounds of plutonium are radioactive and accumulate in bone marrow. |
|
Amber is produced from a marrow discharged by trees belonging to the pine genus, like gum from the cherry, and resin from the ordinary pine. |
|
|
Bone marrow specimens from an Andean mummy about 1500 years old were reported to have shown the presence of the A subtype. |
|
There are no living floors, nor did they process bones to obtain the marrow. |
|
When laying eggs, females grow a special type of bone between the hard outer bone and the marrow of their limbs. |
|
Other types of tissue found in bones include bone marrow, endosteum, periosteum, nerves, blood vessels and cartilage. |
|
Within these spaces are bone marrow and hematopoietic stem cells that give rise to platelets, red blood cells and white blood cells. |
|
Bone marrow, also known as myeloid tissue in red bone marrow, can be found in almost any bone that holds cancellous tissue. |
|
In adults, red marrow is mostly found in the bone marrow of the femur, the ribs, the vertebrae and pelvic bones. |
|
Blood cells that are created in bone marrow include red blood cells, platelets and white blood cells. |
|
As well as creating cells, bone marrow is also one of the major sites where defective or aged red blood cells are destroyed. |
|
Cancers of the bone marrow inside the bone can also affect bone tissue, examples including leukemia and multiple myeloma. |
|
Cancers of bone marrow may be treated with chemotherapy, and other forms of targeted therapy such as immunotherapy may be used. |
|
Current therapy includes ATRA, either alone or in combination with chemotherapy, arsenic or bone marrow transplantation. |
|
Ryan has acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a malignant cancer that originates in cells in bone marrow. |
|
Meanwhile, a policy wonk to his marrow, Angelides crammed his answers with statistics and pitched new proposals. |
|
Several human studies have been done using bone marrow and fat stem cells for articular cartilage lesions. |
|
A drug best known for kick-starting bone marrow to make red blood cells has reversed brain damage due to strokes in test mice. |
|
These represent the average size and haemoglobin content of red cells produced in the bone marrow over the last 120 days. |
|
Bone marrow examination revealed hemophagocytosis and Leishmania amastigotes. |
|
Scientists knew where to search, but trying to find stem cells in the bone marrow was like looking for a toothpick in a lumberyard. |
|
Detection of minimal residual disease by immunostaining of bone marrow biopsics after 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine for hairy cell leukemia. |
|
|
At this point of time, bone marrow examination showed no evidence of lymphomatous infiltration. |
|
The hallmark of folate deficiency is macrocytic anaemia with megaloblastic change in the bone marrow. |
|
A bone marrow aspirate was almost entirely plasmacytoid lymphocytes consistent with Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia. |
|
With ALL, the bone marrow releases large numbers of immature white blood cells, or blast cells. |
|
Researchers in Sweden, China, and the UK have discovered how a tumor affects a patient's blood count and bone marrow characteristics. |
|
These genetically labelled bone marrow cells remylinated a peripheral pattern of mylination reminiscent of schwann cell myelination. |
|
In vitro differentiation of chick embryo bone marrow stromal cells into cartilaginous and bonelike tissues. |
|
Immediate and delayed neurotoxicity after mechlorethamine preparation for bone marrow transplantation. |
|
Megsin is a member of serpines which is sustaining the megacaryocyte of marrow. |
|
Bone marrow aspiration cytology revealed normal cellularity, with myeloid, erythroid, and megakaryocyte cell lines present. |
|
The bone marrow showed increased megakaryocytes with dysplasia and granulocytes with dysplastic changes and an increased number of blasts. |
|
A bone marrow showed a hypercellular smear with plasmacytosis and increased erythropoiesis with severe megaloblastic features. |
|
Hunting for micrometastases in either sentinel lymph nodes or bone marrow isn't justified for these women, say the researchers. |
|
Cammie Forbes, 17, who was first diagnosed with leukaemia 10 years ago, was given a life-saving bone marrow transplant by Alistair, eight. |
|
Cytomorphologic examination of the bone marrow slides separately by 2 morphologists into healthy and pathological samples. |
|
This was accompanied by hyperplasia of the normal T lymphocyte population in his bone marrow. |
|
At birth, the sphenoid sinus is undeveloped, with the sphenoid bone containing erythropoietic marrow. |
|
Metastases were present in the liver, bone marrow, adrenal glands, thyroid gland, sphenoid sinus, brain, dura, and lungs. |
|
Multiple myeloma is a form of blood cancer that arises from plasma cells, a type of white blood cell, found in bone marrow. |
|
The doll is held during difficult procedures such as spinal taps or bone marrow aspirations that require the patient to be motionless. |
|