58 results
- Digital Images
- Online
MRI scan; brain cancer (glioma), brain stem
- Digital Images
- Online
MRI scan; brain cancer (glioma), brain stem
- Digital Images
- Online
MRI scan; brain cancer (glioma), brain stem
- Books
Molecular biology of cancer : mechanisms, targets, and therapeutics / Lauren Pecorino.
Pecorino, Lauren.Date: 2005- Videos
Don't die young. Series 2, part 3, The liver.
Date: 2008- Videos
Life and death in the 21st century. Parts 1-3.
Date: 2000- Books
Tripping over the truth : how the metabolic theory of cancer is overturning one of medicine's most entrenched paradigms / Travis Christofferson ; foreword by Dominic D'Agostino.
Christofferson, Travis.Date: 2017- Archives and manuscripts
087934/Z/08/Z: Biology Zone (Cambridge Science Festival)
Date: 2009Reference: WT/C/6/1/37Part of: Wellcome Trust Corporate Archive- Archives and manuscripts
084432/Z/07/Z: Biology Zone
Date: 2008Reference: WT/C/6/1/14Part of: Wellcome Trust Corporate Archive- Archives and manuscripts
081841/Z/06/Z: Biology Zone: Cambridge Science Festival, Schools' Visits and Online
Date: 2007Reference: WT/C/6/1/101Part of: Wellcome Trust Corporate Archive- Videos
The big C and me. Part one.
Date: 2016- Books
Molecular therapeutics : 21st-century medicine / by Pamela Greenwell, Michelle McCulley.
Greenwell, Pamela.Date: [2007], ©2007- Ephemera
Wellcome Trust ephemera. Box 1.
- Digital Images
- Online
Veratrum album L. Melanthiaceae Distribution: Europe. Cows do not eat Veratrum species in the meadows, and human poisoning with it caused vomiting and fainting. In the 1850s it was found to reduce the heart's action and slow the pulse (Bentley, 1861, called it an 'arterial sedative'), and in 1859 it was used orally in a woman who was having convulsions due to eclampsia. Dr Paul DeLacy Baker in Alabama treated her with drops of a tincture of V. viride. She recovered. It was used thereafter, as the first choice of treatment, and when blood pressure monitoring became possible, it was discovered that it worked by reducing the high blood pressure that occurs in eclampsia. By 1947 death rates were reduced from 30% to 5% by its use at the Boston Lying in Hospital. It works by dilating the arteries in muscles and in the gastrointestinal circulation. A further use of Veratrum species came to light when it was noted that V. californicum -and other species - if eaten by sheep resulted in foetal malformations, in particular only having one eye. The chemical in the plant that was responsible, cyclopamine, was found to act on certain genetic pathways responsible for stem cell division in the regulation of the development of bilateral symmetry in the embryo/foetus. Synthetic analogues have been developed which act on what have come to be called the 'hedgehog signalling pathways' in stem cell division, and these 'Hedgehog inhibitors' are being introduced into medicine for the treatment of various cancers like chondrosarcoma, myelofibrosis, and advanced basal cell carcinoma. The drugs are saridegib, erismodegib and vismodegib. All the early herbals report on its ability to cause vomiting. As a herbal medicine it is Prescription Only, via a registered dentist or physician (UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)). Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Veratrum nigrum L. Melanthiaceae Distribution: Europe. Cows do not eat Veratrum species in the meadows, and human poisoning with it caused vomiting and fainting. In the 1850s it was found to reduce the heart's action and slow the pulse (Bentley, 1861, called it an 'arterial sedative'), and in 1859 it was used orally in a woman who was having convulsions due to eclampsia. Dr Paul DeLacy Baker in Alabama treated her with drops of a tincture of V. viride. She recovered. It was used thereafter, as the first choice of treatment, and, when blood pressure monitoring became possible, it was discovered that it worked by reducing the high blood pressure that occurs in eclampsia. By 1947 death rates were reduced from 30% to 5% by its use at the Boston Lying-in Hospital. It works by dilating the arteries in muscles and in the gastrointestinal circulation. A further use of Veratrum species came to light when it was noted that V. californicum - and other species - if eaten by sheep resulted in foetal malformations, in particular only having one eye. The chemical in the plant that was responsible, cyclopamine, was found to act on certain genetic pathways responsible for stem cell division in the regulation of the development of bilateral symmetry in the embryo/foetus. Synthetic analogues have been developed which act on what have come to be called the 'hedgehog signalling pathways' in stem cell division, and these 'Hedgehog inhibitors' are being introduced into medicine for the treatment of various cancers like chondrosarcoma, myelofibrosis, and advanced basal cell carcinoma. The drugs are saridegib, erismodegib and vismodegib. All the early herbals report on its ability to cause vomiting. As a herbal medicine it is Prescription Only, via a registered dentist or physician (UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)). Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Videos
Curing the incurable.
Date: 1999- Archives and manuscripts
Leukaemia Research
Date: 1990-1997Reference: PP/AMS/M.25Part of: Alice Stewart (1906-2002)- Videos
Bone marrow transplantation present and future.
Date: 1976- Books
Seeking cures : design of therapies for genetically determined diseases / Moyra Smith, MD, PhD, MFA.
Smith, MoyraDate: [2014]- Audio
Matters of the heart. Part. 3, Brave new heart.
Date: 2002- Books
Living with lymphoma : a patient's guide / Elizabeth M. Adler ; introduction by Michael R. Bishop.
Adler, Elizabeth M.Date: 2005- Books
The art and politics of science / Harold Varmus.
Varmus, Harold.Date: [2009], ©2009- Videos
Visions of the future : the biotech revolution.
Date: 2009- Videos
The secret life of the mouse.
Date: 2001- Videos
To see and be seen.
Date: 2006