CHARACTERISTICS OF BASOPHIL LEUKOTRIENE. RELEASE and that may provide one clue to the variability in hista- mine release among donors.
|
www.jimmunol.org/cgi/reprint/136/6/2231.pdf
|
|
Characteristics of human basophil sulfidopeptide leukotriene release: releasability defined as the ability of the basophil to respond to dimeric cross-links...
|
www.jimmunol.org/cgi/content/abstract/136/6/2231?ck=nck
|
|
Article on the observation of the blood cells by the microscope. Granulocytes Neutrophil Eosinophil Basophil These characteristics make more efficient the diffusion of oxygen by these cells. In so-called "sickle-cell anaemia", erythrocytes become typically sickle-shaped.
|
www.funsci.com/fun3_en/blood/blood.htm
|
|
The basophils are isolated by cell sorting after passive sensitization with mouse FITC-IgE anti-DNP, and the isolated basophils exhibit characteristic
|
linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/002217598690102X
|
|
These studies examine characteristics of the quiescent period (timelag) of the free cytosolic calcium ([Ca++]i) elevation that follows stimulation of human basophils through the IgE receptor.
|
www.jleukbio.org/cgi/content/abstract/69/2/224
|
|
These studies examine characteristics of the quiescent period (timelag) of the free cytosolic calcium ([Ca++]i) elevation that follows stimulation of human basophils through the IgE receptor. For studies of basophil response in the microscope chamber (resting on the siliconized coverslip), the concentration of anti...
|
www.jleukbio.org/cgi/content/full/69/2/224
|
|
CD49b(+)IL-4(+) cells sorted from the lungs of RSV-infected STAT1(-/-) mice and stained with Wright-Giemsa had basophil characteristics.
|
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19587017
|
|
the 'anaphylactoid' reaction to NMB by studying the characteristics of histamine release from the basophil leucocytes of patients with such reaction.
|
www.springerlink.com/index/V385428J81221V23.pdf
|
|
An eosinophil is a type of white blood cell. What are eosinophils? Eosinophils are produced in the bone marrow and are normally found in the bloodstream and the gut lining. They contain proteins that help the body to fight infection from parasitic organisms, such as worms. But in certain diseases these proteins can...
|
www.netdoctor.co.uk/diseases/facts/eosinophilia.htm
|
|