Blastogenesis : normal and abormal : proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Fetal Genetic Pathology, held at Big Sky, Montana, October 12-16, 1991

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Bibliographic Information

Blastogenesis : normal and abormal : proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Fetal Genetic Pathology, held at Big Sky, Montana, October 12-16, 1991

editor, John M. Opitz ; associate editor, Natalie W. Paul

(Birth defects, original article series, v. 29, no. 1)

Wiley-Liss, c1993

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The central theme of this book is that an understanding of human developmental biology, both normal and abnormal, cannot progress without the alliance of clinical medicine with research in comparative morphology and embryology, teratology, developmental genetics, molecular biology and pathology. Blastogenesis is a particularly important stage of embryogenesis for study because abnormalities of blastogenesis tend to be severe, multiple and frequently lethal, thus affording geneticists and dysmorphologists an opportunity to study genetic defects in early development

Table of Contents

  • Blastogenesis and the Primary Field in Human Development
  • Early Spontaneous Abortion: Morphological and Karyotypic Findings in 3912 Cases
  • The Pathogenesis of Caudal Dysgenesis (Regression) as Illustrated in Animal Models
  • Development of Abnormalities Resulting in Short Umbilical Cord
  • Triploidy with Complementary Recombinant 7s from Paternal Inversion 7
  • Diprosopus - A Pregastrulation Defect Involving the Head, Neural Tube
  • Heart and Diaphragm
  • Experience with a Foetal Dysmorphology/Pathology Service in an Academic Medical Centre
  • Amniotic Band Sequence: Streeter Hypothesis Revisited
  • Torque Deformation Sequence Associated with Short Umbilical Cord and Abdominal Wall Defect
  • Abnormal Spleen Lobulation and Short Pancreas
  • Adrenal Hyperplastic Nodules in Weidemann-Beckwith Syndrome
  • Heteropagus Epignathus: Report on a Brazilian Twin.

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