WordNet
- cover with wax; "wax the car"
- any of various substances of either mineral origin or plant or animal origin; they are solid at normal temperatures and insoluble in water
- increase in phase; "the moon is waxing" (同)full
- go up or advance; "Sales were climbing after prices were lowered" (同)mount, climb, rise
- (of the moon) pertaining to the period during which the visible surface of the moon increases; "the waxing moon passes from new to full"
- the application of wax to a surface
- a gradual increase in magnitude or extent; "the waxing of the moon"
- a large dark-red oval organ on the left side of the body between the stomach and the diaphragm; produces cells involved in immune responses (同)lien
PrepTutorEJDIC
- 『ろう』(ミツバチが巣を作るために用いる beeswax,その他の動物性,植物性・鉱物性ろうの総称) / 耳あか(earwax) / (床・家具・自動車などをみがく)『ワックス』 / …‘を'ワックスでみがく;…‘に'ろうを塗る
- 〈月が〉だんだん大きくなる,満ちる / 〈大きさ・強さ・数量などが〉増大する / 《古》《形容詞を伴って》〈人が〉(…に)なる
- かんしゃく,腹だち(rage)
- 脾臓(ひぞう) / 〈U〉不きげん,かんしゃく
- (手ざわり・外観が)ろうのような,すべすべした,青白い / ろう製の,ろう核きの
- かんしゃくを起こした,立復した
UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
- Histopathologic study following administration of liposome-encapsulated hemoglobin in the normovolemic rat.
- Rudolph AS, Spielberg H, Spargo BJ, Kossovsky N.SourceCenter for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 20375-5348, USA.
- Journal of biomedical materials research.J Biomed Mater Res.1995 Feb;29(2):189-96.
- Liposome encapsulated hemoglobin is being developed as an artificial resuscitative fluid for in vivo oxygen delivery. In the present report, we examine the effect of accumulation of liposome encapsulated hemoglobin on the structure of reticuloendothelial organs following administration of liposome e
- PMID 7738065
- A historical note on the iodine-sulphuric acid reaction of amyloid.
- Aterman K.AbstractThe historical development of the iodine-sulphuric acid reaction for amyloid is described. The reaction dates back to 1814 when Colin and Gaultier de Claubry, and independently Stromeyer, introduced the iodine reaction for starch. A variant of the acidified iodine reaction appears to have been used for printing paper by Gmelin in 1829, and in 1838 Schleiden used the iodine-sulphuric acid test on plants to demonstrate what he considered to be a transformation of the plant material into starch. Shortly afterwards Payen (1839) defined "cellulose", and the iodine-sulphuric acid reaction became a standard procedure used by botanists to demonstrate this plant component. In 1853 Virchow used Harting's (1847) procedure to demonstrate the reaction of Purkynĕ's corpora amylacea to this test, on the assumption that they might be cellulose derivatives, and applied it to what appeared to be similar corpuscles in a "waxy" spleen. The first histochemical reaction for amyloidosis had thus been introduced into pathology, and continued to exert from that time on an important influence on amyloid research, whose impact is felt to the present day.
- Histochemistry.Histochemistry.1976 Oct 22;49(2):131-43.
- The historical development of the iodine-sulphuric acid reaction for amyloid is described. The reaction dates back to 1814 when Colin and Gaultier de Claubry, and independently Stromeyer, introduced the iodine reaction for starch. A variant of the acidified iodine reaction appears to have been used
- PMID 791904
Related Links
- spleen (splēn) a large, glandlike organ situated in the upper left part of the abdominal cavity, lateral to the cardiac end of the stomach. Among its functions are the disintegration of erythrocytes and the setting free of hemoglobin, which the liver ...
- a. A large, highly vascular lymphoid organ, lying in the human body to the left of the stomach below the diaphragm, serving to store blood, disintegrate old blood cells, filter foreign substances from the blood, and produce lymphocytes. b.
★リンクテーブル★
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- 英
- waxy spleen
- 関
- ベーコン様脾
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