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Product 842 of 1070

Eyden, Banerjee, Ru, Liberski The Ultrastructure of Human Tumours

Applications in Diagnosis and Research

ISBN: 978-3-642-39167-5

Edition: 1st Ed.

Publication date: March 2014

Cover: Hardcover

Pages: 680 p.

Illustrations: 757 ill.

Publisher: Springer

Delivery times, dependent on availability and publisher: between 2 and 14 days from when you complete the order.

Description

  • A comprehensive volume of electron micrographic images of human tumours
  • Set in the context of classical light microscopy-based pathology, and designed to help tumour pathologists achieve greater diagnostic precision
  • Ultrastructural images of new, recently described variants of tumours, not documented in previously published ultrastructural pathology monographs
  • Insights into tumour cell structure and function

The Ultrastructure of Human Tumours: Applications in Diagnosis and Research describes the core features as seen by transmission electron microscopy, defining the different types of cellular differentiation in tumours; this is relevant for tumour nomenclature and diagnosis, which, in turn, are important for tumour pathologists in their collaboration with oncologists for the treatment of cancer patients. The book is divided into 8 chapters. Following an introduction on technique and procedure, there are chapters on epithelial tumours, melanocytic lesions, soft-tissue and related tumours, lymphoma and leukaemia, CNS neoplasms and neuroendocrine and neuronal tumours. Each chapter includes an introductory text that puts the ultrastructural features in the context of classical pathology. The book includes many new findings and interpretations from well-known tumours, as well as ultrastructural information on several newly described tumour entities not dealt with in existing tumour ultrastructure monographs. The book will especially be of value to tumour pathologists who need to solve problem cases with the aid of electron microscopy, but also to cancer research and tissue engineering scientists working to develop anti-cancer and stem-cell-based therapies. However, even those without access to electron microscopy may also benefit from this book, since many of the images provide an ‘explanation’ of the appearances of cells, tissues and tumours familiar to pathologists and scientists from light microscopy. In this respect, it is hoped that this book will stimulate the wider use of electron microscopy in pathology. The book is comprehensively referenced, 680 pages long and lavishly illustrated with 757 figures.