Extreme Tissue Engineering [[electronic resource] ] : Concepts and Strategies for Tissue Fabrication |
Autore | Brown Robert A |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hoboken, : Wiley, 2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (270 p.) |
Disciplina | 571.538 |
Soggetto topico |
Cell Culture Techniques
Regenerative Medicine - methods Tissue Engineering Tissue Scaffolds Culture Techniques Investigative Techniques Medicine Culture Media Prostheses and Implants Equipment and Supplies Health Occupations Clinical Laboratory Techniques Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment Disciplines and Occupations Methods Regenerative Medicine Health & Biological Sciences Biomedical Engineering |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-299-13218-9
1-119-94105-9 1-119-94266-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Extreme Tissue Engineering; Contents; Preface: Extreme Tissue Engineering-a User's Guide; Chapter 1 Which Tissue Engineering Tribe Are You From?; 1.1 Why do we need to engineer tissues at all?; 1.1.1 Will the real tissue engineering and regenerative medicine please stand up?; 1.1.2 Other people's definitions; 1.1.3 Defining our tissue engineering: fixing where we are on the scale-hierarchy; 1.2 Bio-integration as a fundamental component of engineering tissues; 1.2.1 Bio-scientists and physical scientists/engineers: understanding diversity in TERM
1.3 What are the `tribes' of tissue engineering?1.3.1 Special needs for special characteristics: why is networking essential for TERM?; 1.4 Surprises from tissue engineering (Veselius to Vacanti); 1.5 So, really, is there any difference between tissue engineering and regenerative medicine?; 1.5.1 Questions never really asked: repair versus regeneration?; 1.5.2 Understanding the full spectrum: tissue replacement, repair and regeneration; 1.6 Conclusions; 1.7 Summarizing definitions; Annex 1 Other people's definitions of tissue engineering Annex 2 Other people's definitions of regenerative medicineFurther reading; Chapter 2 Checking Out the Tissue Groupings and the Small Print; 2.1 Checking the small print: what did we agree to engineer?; 2.2 Identifying special tissue needs, problems and opportunities; 2.3 When is `aiming high' just `over the top'?; 2.4 Opportunities, risks and problems; 2.4.1 Experimental model tissues (as distinct from spare-parts and fully regenerated tissues); 2.4.2 The pressing need for 3D model tissues; 2.4.3 Tissue models can be useful spin-offs on the way to implants 2.5 Special needs for model tissues2.5.1 Cell selection: constancy versus correctness; 2.5.2 Support matrices-can synthetics fake it?; 2.5.3 Tissue dimensions: when size does matter!; 2.6 Opportunities and sub-divisions for engineering clinical implant tissues; 2.6.1 Making physiological implants: spare parts or complete replacement?; 2.6.2 Making pathological and aphysiological constructs: inventing new parts and new uses; 2.6.3 Learning to use the plethora of tissue requirements as an opportunity; 2.7 Overall summary; Further reading; Chapter 3 What Cells `Hear' When We Say `3D' 3.1 Sensing your environment in three dimensions: seeing the cues3.2 What is this 3D cell culture thing?; 3.3 Is 3D, for cells, more than a stack of 2Ds?; 3.4 On, in and between tissues: what is it like to be a cell?; 3.5 Different forms of cell-space: 2D, 3D, pseudo-3D and 4D cell culture; 3.5.1 What has `3D' ever done for me?; 3.5.2 Introducing extracellular matrix; 3.5.3 Diffusion and mass transport; 3.5.4 Oxygen mass transport and gradients in 3D engineered tissues: scaling Mount Doom; 3.6 Matrix-rich, cell-rich and pseudo-3D cell cultures 3.7 4D cultures-or cultures with a 4th dimension? |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910462793303321 |
Brown Robert A | ||
Hoboken, : Wiley, 2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Extreme Tissue Engineering [[electronic resource] ] : Concepts and Strategies for Tissue Fabrication |
Autore | Brown Robert A |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hoboken, : Wiley, 2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (270 p.) |
Disciplina | 571.538 |
Soggetto topico |
Cell Culture Techniques
Regenerative Medicine - methods Tissue Engineering Tissue Scaffolds Culture Techniques Investigative Techniques Medicine Culture Media Prostheses and Implants Equipment and Supplies Health Occupations Clinical Laboratory Techniques Methods Regenerative Medicine Health & Biological Sciences Biomedical Engineering |
ISBN |
1-299-13218-9
1-119-94105-9 1-119-94266-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Extreme Tissue Engineering; Contents; Preface: Extreme Tissue Engineering-a User's Guide; Chapter 1 Which Tissue Engineering Tribe Are You From?; 1.1 Why do we need to engineer tissues at all?; 1.1.1 Will the real tissue engineering and regenerative medicine please stand up?; 1.1.2 Other people's definitions; 1.1.3 Defining our tissue engineering: fixing where we are on the scale-hierarchy; 1.2 Bio-integration as a fundamental component of engineering tissues; 1.2.1 Bio-scientists and physical scientists/engineers: understanding diversity in TERM
1.3 What are the `tribes' of tissue engineering?1.3.1 Special needs for special characteristics: why is networking essential for TERM?; 1.4 Surprises from tissue engineering (Veselius to Vacanti); 1.5 So, really, is there any difference between tissue engineering and regenerative medicine?; 1.5.1 Questions never really asked: repair versus regeneration?; 1.5.2 Understanding the full spectrum: tissue replacement, repair and regeneration; 1.6 Conclusions; 1.7 Summarizing definitions; Annex 1 Other people's definitions of tissue engineering Annex 2 Other people's definitions of regenerative medicineFurther reading; Chapter 2 Checking Out the Tissue Groupings and the Small Print; 2.1 Checking the small print: what did we agree to engineer?; 2.2 Identifying special tissue needs, problems and opportunities; 2.3 When is `aiming high' just `over the top'?; 2.4 Opportunities, risks and problems; 2.4.1 Experimental model tissues (as distinct from spare-parts and fully regenerated tissues); 2.4.2 The pressing need for 3D model tissues; 2.4.3 Tissue models can be useful spin-offs on the way to implants 2.5 Special needs for model tissues2.5.1 Cell selection: constancy versus correctness; 2.5.2 Support matrices-can synthetics fake it?; 2.5.3 Tissue dimensions: when size does matter!; 2.6 Opportunities and sub-divisions for engineering clinical implant tissues; 2.6.1 Making physiological implants: spare parts or complete replacement?; 2.6.2 Making pathological and aphysiological constructs: inventing new parts and new uses; 2.6.3 Learning to use the plethora of tissue requirements as an opportunity; 2.7 Overall summary; Further reading; Chapter 3 What Cells `Hear' When We Say `3D' 3.1 Sensing your environment in three dimensions: seeing the cues3.2 What is this 3D cell culture thing?; 3.3 Is 3D, for cells, more than a stack of 2Ds?; 3.4 On, in and between tissues: what is it like to be a cell?; 3.5 Different forms of cell-space: 2D, 3D, pseudo-3D and 4D cell culture; 3.5.1 What has `3D' ever done for me?; 3.5.2 Introducing extracellular matrix; 3.5.3 Diffusion and mass transport; 3.5.4 Oxygen mass transport and gradients in 3D engineered tissues: scaling Mount Doom; 3.6 Matrix-rich, cell-rich and pseudo-3D cell cultures 3.7 4D cultures-or cultures with a 4th dimension? |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910786072003321 |
Brown Robert A | ||
Hoboken, : Wiley, 2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Extreme Tissue Engineering [[electronic resource] ] : Concepts and Strategies for Tissue Fabrication |
Autore | Brown Robert A |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hoboken, : Wiley, 2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (270 p.) |
Disciplina | 571.538 |
Soggetto topico |
Cell Culture Techniques
Regenerative Medicine - methods Tissue Engineering Tissue Scaffolds Culture Techniques Investigative Techniques Medicine Culture Media Prostheses and Implants Equipment and Supplies Health Occupations Clinical Laboratory Techniques Methods Regenerative Medicine Health & Biological Sciences Biomedical Engineering |
ISBN |
1-299-13218-9
1-119-94105-9 1-119-94266-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Extreme Tissue Engineering; Contents; Preface: Extreme Tissue Engineering-a User's Guide; Chapter 1 Which Tissue Engineering Tribe Are You From?; 1.1 Why do we need to engineer tissues at all?; 1.1.1 Will the real tissue engineering and regenerative medicine please stand up?; 1.1.2 Other people's definitions; 1.1.3 Defining our tissue engineering: fixing where we are on the scale-hierarchy; 1.2 Bio-integration as a fundamental component of engineering tissues; 1.2.1 Bio-scientists and physical scientists/engineers: understanding diversity in TERM
1.3 What are the `tribes' of tissue engineering?1.3.1 Special needs for special characteristics: why is networking essential for TERM?; 1.4 Surprises from tissue engineering (Veselius to Vacanti); 1.5 So, really, is there any difference between tissue engineering and regenerative medicine?; 1.5.1 Questions never really asked: repair versus regeneration?; 1.5.2 Understanding the full spectrum: tissue replacement, repair and regeneration; 1.6 Conclusions; 1.7 Summarizing definitions; Annex 1 Other people's definitions of tissue engineering Annex 2 Other people's definitions of regenerative medicineFurther reading; Chapter 2 Checking Out the Tissue Groupings and the Small Print; 2.1 Checking the small print: what did we agree to engineer?; 2.2 Identifying special tissue needs, problems and opportunities; 2.3 When is `aiming high' just `over the top'?; 2.4 Opportunities, risks and problems; 2.4.1 Experimental model tissues (as distinct from spare-parts and fully regenerated tissues); 2.4.2 The pressing need for 3D model tissues; 2.4.3 Tissue models can be useful spin-offs on the way to implants 2.5 Special needs for model tissues2.5.1 Cell selection: constancy versus correctness; 2.5.2 Support matrices-can synthetics fake it?; 2.5.3 Tissue dimensions: when size does matter!; 2.6 Opportunities and sub-divisions for engineering clinical implant tissues; 2.6.1 Making physiological implants: spare parts or complete replacement?; 2.6.2 Making pathological and aphysiological constructs: inventing new parts and new uses; 2.6.3 Learning to use the plethora of tissue requirements as an opportunity; 2.7 Overall summary; Further reading; Chapter 3 What Cells `Hear' When We Say `3D' 3.1 Sensing your environment in three dimensions: seeing the cues3.2 What is this 3D cell culture thing?; 3.3 Is 3D, for cells, more than a stack of 2Ds?; 3.4 On, in and between tissues: what is it like to be a cell?; 3.5 Different forms of cell-space: 2D, 3D, pseudo-3D and 4D cell culture; 3.5.1 What has `3D' ever done for me?; 3.5.2 Introducing extracellular matrix; 3.5.3 Diffusion and mass transport; 3.5.4 Oxygen mass transport and gradients in 3D engineered tissues: scaling Mount Doom; 3.6 Matrix-rich, cell-rich and pseudo-3D cell cultures 3.7 4D cultures-or cultures with a 4th dimension? |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910828669303321 |
Brown Robert A | ||
Hoboken, : Wiley, 2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The Leukemia-Lymphoma Cell Line Factsbook [[electronic resource]] |
Autore | Drexler Hans G |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Burlington, : Elsevier Science, 2000 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (751 p.) |
Disciplina |
616.99/419027 21
616.99419 |
Collana | Factsbook |
Soggetto topico |
Cancer cells
Cell Line Cell lines Hematologic Neoplasms Hematopoietic stem cells Human cell culture Leukemia Leukemia, Experimental Leukemia, Experimental--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Lymphomas--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Cancer cells--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Human cell culture--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Hematopoietic stem cells--Handb Lymphoma Lymphomas Research Tumor Cells, Cultured Neoplasms by Histologic Type Lymphoproliferative Disorders Cells, Cultured Culture Techniques Neoplasms Lymphatic Diseases Cells Clinical Laboratory Techniques Immunoproliferative Disorders Anatomy Diseases Investigative Techniques Immune System Diseases Hemic and Lymphatic Diseases Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment Cell Culture Techniques Medicine Health & Biological Sciences Hematologic Diseases |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-281-05417-8
9786611054175 0-08-053544-5 1-4356-0498-9 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Front Cover; The Leukemia Lymphoma Cell Line; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Abbreviations; SECTION I: THE INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS; Chapter 1. Introduction; Chapter 2. History and Classification of Hematopoietic Cell Lines; Chapter 3. EBV- and HTLV-Positive Cell Lines; Chapter 4. Guidelines for Characterization of Cell Lines; Chapter 5. Establishment and Culture of Cell Lines; Chapter 6. Authentication of Cell Lines; Chapter 7. Mycoplasma Detection and Elimination; Chapter 8. Availability of Cell Lines and Cell Line Banks; SECTION II: B-CELL LEUKEMIA AND B-CELL LYMPHOMA CELL LINES
Part 1 Precursor B-Cell LinesPart 2 Mature B-Cell Lines; SECTION III: MYELOMA AND PLASMA CELL LEUKEMIA CELL LINES; SECTION IV: T-CELL LEUKEMIA AND T-CELL LYMPHOMA CELL LINES; Part 1 Immature T-Cell Lines; Part 2 Mature T-Cell Lines; SECTION V: NATURAL KILLER CELL LEUKEMIA-LYMPHOMA CELL LINES; SECTION VI: HODGKIN'S DISEASE CELL LINES; SECTION VII: ANAPLASTIC LARGE CELL LYMPHOMA CELL LINES; SECTION VIII: MYELOID LEUKEMIA CELL LINES; Part 1 Myelocytic Cell Lines; Part 2 Monocytic Cell Lines; Part 3 Erythrocytic- Megakaryocytic Cell Lines; SECTION IX: TABLES Table I. Additional Precursor B-Cell LinesTable II. Additional Mature B-Cell Lines; Table III. Panel of Selected Burkitt's Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table IV. Additional Myeloma and Plasma Cell Leukemia Cell Lines; Table V. Additional Immature T-Cell Lines; Table VI. Additional Mature T-Cell Lines; Table VII. Panel of Selected Adult T-Cell Leukemia-Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table VIII. Additional Natural Killer Cell Leukemia-Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table IX. Additional Hodgkin's Disease Cell Lines; Table X. Additional Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table XI. Additional Myelocytic Cell Lines Table XII. Additional Monocytic Cell LinesTable XIII. Additional Erythrocytic-Megakaryocytic Cell Lines; Table XIV. Growth Factor-Dependent Cell Lines; Table XV. Cell Lines with Unique Translocations and Fusion Genes; Table XVI. False and Misinterpreted Cell Lines; Table XVII. Recommended Reference Cell Lines; Index |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910458580803321 |
Drexler Hans G | ||
Burlington, : Elsevier Science, 2000 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The Leukemia-Lymphoma Cell Line Factsbook [[electronic resource]] |
Autore | Drexler Hans G |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Burlington, : Elsevier Science, 2000 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (751 p.) |
Disciplina |
616.99/419027 21
616.99419 |
Collana | Factsbook |
Soggetto topico |
Cancer cells
Cell Line Cell lines Hematologic Neoplasms Hematopoietic stem cells Human cell culture Leukemia Leukemia, Experimental Leukemia, Experimental--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Lymphomas--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Cancer cells--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Human cell culture--Handbooks, manuals, etc. Hematopoietic stem cells--Handb Lymphoma Lymphomas Research Tumor Cells, Cultured Neoplasms by Histologic Type Lymphoproliferative Disorders Cells, Cultured Culture Techniques Neoplasms Lymphatic Diseases Cells Clinical Laboratory Techniques Immunoproliferative Disorders Anatomy Diseases Investigative Techniques Immune System Diseases Hemic and Lymphatic Diseases Cell Culture Techniques Medicine Health & Biological Sciences Hematologic Diseases |
ISBN |
1-281-05417-8
9786611054175 0-08-053544-5 1-4356-0498-9 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Front Cover; The Leukemia Lymphoma Cell Line; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Abbreviations; SECTION I: THE INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS; Chapter 1. Introduction; Chapter 2. History and Classification of Hematopoietic Cell Lines; Chapter 3. EBV- and HTLV-Positive Cell Lines; Chapter 4. Guidelines for Characterization of Cell Lines; Chapter 5. Establishment and Culture of Cell Lines; Chapter 6. Authentication of Cell Lines; Chapter 7. Mycoplasma Detection and Elimination; Chapter 8. Availability of Cell Lines and Cell Line Banks; SECTION II: B-CELL LEUKEMIA AND B-CELL LYMPHOMA CELL LINES
Part 1 Precursor B-Cell LinesPart 2 Mature B-Cell Lines; SECTION III: MYELOMA AND PLASMA CELL LEUKEMIA CELL LINES; SECTION IV: T-CELL LEUKEMIA AND T-CELL LYMPHOMA CELL LINES; Part 1 Immature T-Cell Lines; Part 2 Mature T-Cell Lines; SECTION V: NATURAL KILLER CELL LEUKEMIA-LYMPHOMA CELL LINES; SECTION VI: HODGKIN'S DISEASE CELL LINES; SECTION VII: ANAPLASTIC LARGE CELL LYMPHOMA CELL LINES; SECTION VIII: MYELOID LEUKEMIA CELL LINES; Part 1 Myelocytic Cell Lines; Part 2 Monocytic Cell Lines; Part 3 Erythrocytic- Megakaryocytic Cell Lines; SECTION IX: TABLES Table I. Additional Precursor B-Cell LinesTable II. Additional Mature B-Cell Lines; Table III. Panel of Selected Burkitt's Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table IV. Additional Myeloma and Plasma Cell Leukemia Cell Lines; Table V. Additional Immature T-Cell Lines; Table VI. Additional Mature T-Cell Lines; Table VII. Panel of Selected Adult T-Cell Leukemia-Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table VIII. Additional Natural Killer Cell Leukemia-Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table IX. Additional Hodgkin's Disease Cell Lines; Table X. Additional Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Cell Lines; Table XI. Additional Myelocytic Cell Lines Table XII. Additional Monocytic Cell LinesTable XIII. Additional Erythrocytic-Megakaryocytic Cell Lines; Table XIV. Growth Factor-Dependent Cell Lines; Table XV. Cell Lines with Unique Translocations and Fusion Genes; Table XVI. False and Misinterpreted Cell Lines; Table XVII. Recommended Reference Cell Lines; Index |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910784530403321 |
Drexler Hans G | ||
Burlington, : Elsevier Science, 2000 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|