02560oam 2200481 a 450 991079348920332120240125201636.0(OCoLC)on1090193270(CKB)4100000007702064(MiAaPQ)EBC6269421(UtOrBLW)20674265(UtOrBLW)9781496398949(EXLCZ)99410000000770206420180918d2020 uy 0engurunu---uuuuutxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHistology for pathologists /[edited by] Stacey E. Mills5th ed.Philadelphia :Wolters Kluwer,[2020]1 online resource color illustrations1-4963-9894-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.Section I: Cutaneous tissue – Section II: Breast – Section III: Musculoskeletal system – Section IV: Nervous system – Section V: Head and neck – Section VI: Thorax and serous membranes – Section VII: Alimentary tract – Section VIII: Hematopoietic system – Section VIX: Genitourinary tract – Section X: Female genital system – Section XI: Endocrine"The fourth edition of Histology for Pathologists was published in 2012 and, as before, it is again reasonable to ask if "normal" has changed enough in the ensuing 6 years to justify a new edition. The answer, of course, is that normal has not changed at all (evolution is indeed a slow process!) but our perception of normal continues to expand and improve. In particular, we have developed many new immunohistochemical markers, and the ever-growing spectrum of their expression in normal tissues provides insights into pathologic processes arising from or differentiating toward these tissues. We also continue to recognize new variations of normal that cause diagnostic confusion and touch on the interface between normal and disease. Accordingly, the fifth edition brings incremental but valuable improvements in our perceptions of human histology"--Provided by publisher.HistologyPathologyHistologyHistology, PathologicalHistologyPathologyHistology.Histology, Pathological.611/.018Mills Stacey E1478666DNLM/DLCDLCBOOK9910793489203321Histology for pathologists3801772UNINA