Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix, 4Ed


Book Description

Ghadially successfully collects, classifies, describes, and illustrates the ultrastructure of every normal and pathological intracellular and extracellular structure in humans and other animals. This authoritative work serves as a textbook and atlas of cellular pathology at the ultrastructural level. There is no other book from which one may learn in a systemic fashion about the numerous changes that occur in cellular organelles and inclusions as a result of disease or experimental procedures. The 4th edition includes a number of new ultrastructural changes and lesions such as, secretory granules in bronchio-alveolar carcinoma, fibrohistiocytes, crinophagy in normal and neoplastic cells, and interdigitations and infoldings of the cell membrane.




Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix, Vol. 1, Fourth Ed


Book Description

Ghadially successfully collects, classifies, describes, and illustrates the ultrastructure of every normal and pathological intracellular and extracellular structure in humans and other animals.This authoritative work serves as a textbook and atlas of cellular pathology at the ultrastructural level. There is no other book from which one may learn in a systemic fashion about the numerous changes that occur in cellular organelles and inclusions as a result of disease or experimental procedures. The 4th edition includes a number of new ultrastructural changes and lesions such as, secretory granules in bronchio-alveolar carcinoma, fibrohistiocytes, crinophagy in normal and neoplastic cells, and interdigitations and infoldings of the cell membrane.




Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix, Vol 2 Fourth Edition


Book Description

Ghadially successfully collects, classifies, describes, and illustrates the ultrastructure of every normal and pathological intracellular and extracellular structure in humans and other animals.This authoritative work serves as a textbook and atlas of cellular pathology at the ultrastructural level. There is no other book from which one may learn in a systemic fashion about the numerous changes that occur in cellular organelles and inclusions as a result of disease or experimental procedures. The 4th edition includes a number of new ultrastructural changes and lesions such as, secretory granules in bronchio-alveolar carcinoma, fibrohistiocytes, crinophagy in normal and neoplastic cells, and interdigitations and infoldings of the cell membrane.







Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix


Book Description

Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix: Third Edition Volume 2 presents a comprehensive examination of the intracellular lesion. It discusses the analysis of pathological tissues using electron microscope. It addresses the experimental procedures made on the cellular level. Some of the topics covered in the book are the structure, distribution, and variations of rod-shaped microtubulated bodies; morphology of intracytoplasmic filaments; melanosome-producing and melanosome-containing cells in tumours; myofilaments in striated muscle; and pathological variations in size, shape, and numbers of microbodies. The intracytoplasmic and intranuclear annulate lamellae are fully covered. An in-depth account of the classification, history, and nomenclature of lysosomes are provided. The morphology and normal variations of melanosomes and anchoring fibrils are completely presented. A chapter is devoted to the endocytotic structures and cell processes. Another section focuses on the classification and nomenclature of fibrous components. The book can provide useful information to cytologists, pathologists, students, and researchers.




Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix


Book Description

Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix: Third Edition Volume I present a comprehensive examination of the intracellular lesion. It discusses the analysis of pathological tissues using electron microscope. It addresses the experimental procedures made on the cellular level. Some of the topics covered in the book are the physiological analysis of the nucleus; nuclear matrix, interchromatin, and perichromatin granules; structure and function of centrioles; characteristics of mitochondria; Golgi complex in cell differentiation and neoplasia; and degranulation of rough endoplasmic reticulum. The intracytoplasmic and intranuclear annulate lamellae are fully covered. An in-depth account of the classification, history, and nomenclature of lysosomes are provided. The morphology and normal variations of melanosomes and anchoring fibrils are completely presented. A chapter is devoted to the endocytotic structures and cell processes. Another section focuses on the classification and nomenclature of fibrous components. The book can provide useful information to cytologists, scientists, students, and researchers.







Ultrastructural Pathology


Book Description

Ultrastructural Pathology




Diagnostic Ultrastructural Pathology


Book Description

Diagnostic Ultrastructural Pathology, Volumes II and III, presents individual problem-based cases in a well-illustrated format, using numerous electron micrographs to convey appropriate and necessary visual information for the diagnosis of human disease. The format facilitates the teaching of the case approach for diagnostic ultrastructural pathology using clinical-ultrastructural-pathologic correlation. These guides illustrate key reasoning processes that physicians use to resolve individual clinical problems through the use of electron microscopy. The material is useful to a wide variety of physicians and students of medicine, structure, and disease at various levels of training, as well as in the training of and operational use by technical support staff. The two volumes include a total of 50 cases and a procedural guide for the ultrastructural pathology laboratory. The cases were selected using four principal criteria: (1) classic cases, which are diagnosed readily by light microscopy to facilitate the electron microscopic diagnosis of less classic cases; (2) diagnostic cases, for which ultrastructural analysis is essential for diagnosis; (3) supportive cases, where either the light or the electron microscopic diagnosis is supportive, and thus confirmatory, of the other; and (4) new facts cases, which establish new knowledge regarding the pathogenesis of disease using electron microscopy as the investigative modality. The 50 cases are grouped anatomically in four major categories. Volume II contains the sections on the respiratory and nervous systems, and Volume III presents the cases dealing with the endocrine and hematopoietic systems. Each section is preceded by introductory remarks. Each case cites relevant, classic, anatomic pathology papers and related research papers. These volumes also include multiple functional indices, providing ready access to the material from several starting points. There are separate indices for presenting symptoms, differential diagnostic groups, ultrastructural pathology criteria, and final diagnostic categories. As a valuable resource and guide, Diagnostic Ultrastructural Pathology, Volumes II and III, is an excellent, high-quality addition to the field of diagnostic pathology.




Ultrastructure of the Kidney


Book Description

Ultrastructure in Biological Systems, Volume 2: Ultrastructure of the Kidney provides an overview of the state of knowledge on the ultrastructure of the mammalian kidney. The application of the electron microscope to studies of the kidney resulted in the demonstration of the hitherto undetected early thickening of the basement membrane of glomerular capillaries in glomerulonephritis. Yet many problems remain, particularly in relation to the correlation between function and the ultrastructure of components of the kidney—mesangium, glomerulus, juxtaglomerular apparatus, and the renal tubules. It is only recently that the mesangium has come to be accepted as real, and many questions remain as to the function of its cells. The existence of true membranes between foot processes of the epithelial cells of glomeruli is a newly established fact; but what this has to do with glomerular filtration is not known at present. Granules apparently secretory in nature have been identified in cells of the juxtaglomerular apparatus, but so far their presence has not been correlated with specific functional change. Artifacts introduced at fixation are now known to have considerable relevance in interpreting the ultrastructure of the normal nephron. These are paraphrased views of the contributors to this monograph who, while acquainting the reader with the research being carried on in these areas, have also brought into focus the many problems still awaiting solution.