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Proceedings of a Satellite Symposium of the Ninth International Congress of Endocrinology, held in Bordeaux, France, September 6-10, 1992
Section I Selected Aquatic Plant Organisms.- Dasycladaceae: A Family of Giant unicellular Algae Ideal for Research.- Acetabularia: A Giant Unicellular Organism for Studying Polarity.- Model Algal System to Study Plant Development.- Section II Selected Aquatic Animal Organisms.- Experimental Analysis of Developmental Processes in Marine Hydroids.- Reproduction and Development in Ctenophores.- Descriptive and Experimental Embryology of the Turbellaria: Present Knowledge, Open Questions and Future Trends.- Growth, Degrowth and Regeneration as Developmental Phenomena in Adult Freshwater Planarians.- Genealogy, Geometry and Genes: Experimental Embryology of Caenorhabditis elegans.- Gap Junctional Communication and Cell Cycle Duration in the Early Molluscan Embryo.- In vitro Preparation of the Early Squid Blastoderm.- On the Establishment of Polarity in Polychaete Eggs.- Experimental Embryology in Leeches: Cellular and Molecular Approaches.- Practical Approaches to the Study of Nervous System Development in Hirudinid Leeches.- Starfish Oocytes and Sea Urchin Eggs as Models to Study the Intracellular Mechanisms Controlling the Cell Division Cycle.- Morphogenesis in the Sea Urchin Embryo: Mechanism of Gastrulation.- Fertilization in Aquatic Animals.- Patterns of Gene Expression during Ascidian Development.- Some Contributions of Research on Early Teleost Embryogenesis to General Problems of Development.- Gastrulation in the Zebrafish Brachydanio rerio (Teleostei) as seen in the Scanning Electron Microscope.- Section III Historical and Conceptual Aspects of "Causal Embryology".- L'Epigenèse et la Préformation à l'Epoque de l'Embryologie Causale.- Section IV Contributions of General Value to Embryological Research.- The Role of Retinoic Acid in Vertebrate Limb Morphogenesis.- Physiological Approach to the Early Embryogenesis.- Environmental Pollution and Embryonic Development: Relevance of Standardized Toxicological Tests.- Participants Photo.- Author Index.
Endocrynology of Embryoendometrial Interactions: A Hundred Years of Fascinating Discoveries; A. Psychoyos. Uterine Receptivity: Experimental Studies: Cell Biology of Endometrial Receptivity and of Trophoblast-Endometrial Interactions; H.W. Denker. Progesterone Directed Gene Expression in Rat Uterine Stromal Cells; J. Mulholland, et al. Uterine Receptivity: Clinical Studies: Receptive and Refractory Period in Human Implantation; J. Mandelbaum, et al. Characterization of the Human Endometrium in Relation to Implantation; P.C. Svalander, et al. The M.C. Chang Memorial Lecture: RU486: After Ten Years Novel Molecules and Reproductive Medicine; E.E. Baulieu. Pregnancy Recognition: Involvement of Local Mediators in Blastocyst Implantation; T.G. Kennedy. The Decidual Hormones and Their Role in Pregnancy Recognition; G. Gibori. Endometrial Responses to Receptivity: Embryo-Endometrial Interactions; S.K. Smith. Insulinlike Growth Factors and Their Binding Proteins in the Endometrium; L.J. Murphy. The Next Years: Future Prospect of Research on Endocrinology of Embryo-Endometrial Interactions; K. Yoshinaga. 21 additional articles. Index.
The search for a reversible male contraceptive has centered upon the suppression of sperm production or sperm motility. These investiga- tions have revealed the remarkable fact that with gossypol, it is possible to separate an effect on the testis' gamete-producing function from an effect on its hormone-producing function.
Reproductive tract infections (RTis) have become a silent epidemic that is devastating women's lives. Each year, thousands of women die needlessly from the consequences of these infections, including cervical cancer, ectopic pregnancy, acute and chronic infections of the uterus and the fallopian tubes, and puerperal infections.
The annual meeting of the Perinatal Biochemical Group of the Spanish Biochemical Society held in Madrid on December 15-16, 1989, provided an excellent opportunity to bring together a group of distinguished investigators both from Spain and from abroad with a common interest in developmental endocrinology and biochemistry.
Proceedings of a symposium held in Exeter, New Hampshire, October 21-25, 1990
Within a few short years since the discovery of the progesterone receptor, chemists have synthesized molecules with a greater affinity for the receptor than progesterone itself and which, while occupying the receptor, fail to trigger the events which transform a target cell from the unstimulated to the stimulated state.
Proceedings of a workshop, held October 8-12, in Bellagio, Italy
Most of the epidemiologic and experimental animal research has focused on the relationship between maternal exposures including medications, tobacco smoke, alcohol, infections, and occupation and the occurrence of spontaneous abortion, low birth weight, and birth defects.
Reproductive tract infections (RTis) have become a silent epidemic that is devastating women's lives. Each year, thousands of women die needlessly from the consequences of these infections, including cervical cancer, ectopic pregnancy, acute and chronic infections of the uterus and the fallopian tubes, and puerperal infections.
Proceedings of an international workshop held in Bellagio, Italy, October 29-November 2, 1990
Most of the epidemiologic and experimental animal research has focused on the relationship between maternal exposures including medications, tobacco smoke, alcohol, infections, and occupation and the occurrence of spontaneous abortion, low birth weight, and birth defects.
The search for a reversible male contraceptive has centered upon the suppression of sperm production or sperm motility. These investiga tions have revealed the remarkable fact that with gossypol, it is possible to separate an effect on the testis' gamete-producing function from an effect on its hormone-producing function.
Proceedings of a conference, sponsored by the Committee on Population, held at the National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C., October 6-7, 1988
Contraceptive research has entered the new age of vaccines. These trials, carried out under the auspices of the Indian Council for Medical Research, were the first application of the carrier protein concept for a vaccine for human use.
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