Zobrazeno 1 - 5
of 5
pro vyhledávání: '"John T. Weyhrich"'
Publikováno v:
Vaccine. 21:3998-4002
Rabid dog exposures cause >99% of human rabies deaths world-wide. In developing countries, where dogs are the viral reservoir, the 30-50% vaccination coverage of dog populations is insufficient to break the disease transmission cycle. In addition, ma
Autor:
John T. Weyhrich, Robert Thomas, Hiroji Akimoto, Margaret D. Allen, Christine L. Rothnie, Thomas O. McDonald
Publikováno v:
Transplantation. 61:1610-1617
Most antirejection therapies target immune activation but may not reduce leukocyte infiltration into the graft. The leukocyte integrin CD18 has been shown to be important for leukocyte migration in vitro. We postulated that antibody blockade of CD18
Autor:
Helena B. Pasieka, Melvin B. Dennis, John T. Weyhrich, Mika N. Sinanan, Marcel I. Perret-Gentil, Dave M. Anderson, Ted A. Birkebak
Publikováno v:
Journal of investigative surgery : the official journal of the Academy of Surgical Research. 13(4)
Tissue biopsy sampling by laparotomy is considered major surgery, which precludes serial sampling. This increases variability and requires a larger n value for pathogenesis studies. To address this problem, a study was conducted to develop and valida
Autor:
John T. Weyhrich, Karimah Hudda, Mika N. Sinanan, Dave M. Anderson, Melvin B. Dennis, Santiago Horgan, Marcel I. Perret-Gentil
Publikováno v:
Journal of investigative surgery : the official journal of the Academy of Surgical Research. 12(3)
Because major surgery is usually required to obtain biopsies of abdominal organs, regulations tend to limit the number of procedures on individual animals to one. This study was conducted to develop a more humane, minor, comparatively cost-effective,
Autor:
John T. Weyhrich, Margaret D. Allen, Sadahiro Sai, Hiroji Akimoto, Karen Nelson, Robert G. Andrews, Robert Thomas, Lakshmi K. Gaur, Joy Dalesandro, Jeffrey Hall
Publikováno v:
Cellular immunology. 181(2)
Engraftment of stem cell-enriched donor marrow implanted in the thymus of a foreign host might facilitate acceptance of donor-specific organ or tissue grafts. To test this hypothesis, allogeneic and xenogeneic CD34 + marrow cells from unrelated adult