37 results
- Digital Images
- Online
Foetal cells from amniotic fluid in culture
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
- Online
Foetal cells from amniotic fluid, colchicine
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
- Online
Foetal cells in amniotic fluid, + colchicine
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
- Online
Foetal cells in amniotic fluid, low power LM
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
- Online
Foetal cells from amniotic fluid in culture
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Archives and manuscripts
Application form
Date: 1988-1989Reference: SA/HPR/C/227/3Part of: Health Promotion Research Trust- Archives and manuscripts
Correspondence
Date: 1988-1992Reference: SA/HPR/C/227/2Part of: Health Promotion Research Trust- Archives and manuscripts
Quarterly and annual reports
Date: 1989-1992Reference: SA/HPR/C/227/1Part of: Health Promotion Research Trust- Archives and manuscripts
Publications
Date: 1990-1993Reference: SA/HPR/C/227/4Part of: Health Promotion Research Trust- Archives and manuscripts
Health Promotion Research Trust Project 227: Social and psychological aspects of screening for foetal abnormality during routine ante-natal care - the sickle cell study
Date: 1988-1993Reference: SA/HPR/C/227Part of: Health Promotion Research Trust- Digital Images
- Online
Abnormal foetal cells in amniotic fluid
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
- Online
Formation of islets from ductal cells in foetal pancreas
Anne Clark, University of Oxford- Digital Images
- Online
Unbalanced translocation, cosmid probe
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Digital Images
- Online
Translocation shown up by cosmid probe
Wessex Reg. Genetics Centre- Books
Neuronal differentiation in implanted foetal cortical tissue / W.E. Le Gros Clark.
Clark, Wilfrid E. Le Gros (Wilfrid Edward Le Gros), 1895-1971.Date: [1940?]- Archives and manuscripts
Measurements of Chromosomes in Triploid Cells
Date: 1963Reference: PENROSE/2/41/9/21Part of: L. S. Penrose Papers- Videos
Last hope clinic.
Date: 2007- 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- Digital Images
- Online
Stages of limb development
Paul Martin- Digital Images
- Online
Misreplication of DNA in human fibroblast nucleus
Ezequiel Miron, University of Oxford- Archives and manuscripts
Correspondence: Sally Solomon and R. N. C. Aitkin
Date: 1975-1978Reference: PP/AMO/F/2/6Part of: Amoroso, Professor Emmanuel Ciprian CBE, FRCP, FRS (1901-1982)- Digital Images
- Online
Misreplication of DNA in human fibroblast nucleus
Ezequiel Miron, University of Oxford- Archives and manuscripts
Digital Scientific Instruments
Date: 1994-1997Reference: UGC 188/7/5Part of: Papers of Malcolm Andrew Ferguson-Smith, geneticist, Professor of Medical Genetics, University of Glasgow, Scotland- Digital Images
- Online
Sanguinaria canadensis (Bloodroot, Pucoon or Indian paint)
Dr Henry Oakeley