Neoplasms principles of development and diversity
Material type: TextPublication details: Jones & Bartlett Pub 2009ISBN:- 9780763755706
- 616.994 BER-N
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reference Book | Amity Central Library AIB | Reference | 616.994 BER-N (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Not For Loan | 16151 |
Part I: Speciation
Chapter 1. What Properties Are Shared by All Cancers?
Chapter 2. Carcinogenesis
Chapter 3. The Mystery of Tumor Diversity and of Type-Specific Tumor Uniformity
Chapter 4. The Range of Neoplastic Phenotypes
Chapter 5. What Can We Learn About Human Neoplasms by Studying Animals, Plants, Fish, and Insects?
Part II. Classification
Chapter 6. What Does Classification of All Animals Tell Us About the Classification of All Neoplasms?
Chapter 7. Classification of Neoplasms
Chapter 8. Classification by Morphology (What the Tumor Looks Like)
Chapter 9. Classification by Cause
Chapter 10. Classification by Topography (Where the Tumor Is Located)
Chapter 12. Classification by Function and Common Pathways
Chapter 13. Molecular Classification of Neoplasms
Chapter 14. Classification by Developmental Lineage Is Best
Chapter 15. The Six Major Classes of Neoplasms
Chapter 16. Ectodermal and Endodermal Neoplasms
Chapter 17. Mesodermal Neoplasms
Chapter 18. Tumors of Neuroectoderm (Central Nervous System)
Chapter 19. Neural Crest Neoplasms
Chapter 20. Neoplasms of Class Germ Cell and Class Trophectoderm
Chapter 21. Specialized Cancer Nomenclatures and the Developmental Lineage Classification and Taxonomy of Neoplasms
Chapter 22. Cancer Ontologies
Part III. Cancer Research and the End of Neoplasms
Chapter 23. Class-Dependent Cancer Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment
Chapter 24. Finding Neoplasms: Suggestions for Cancer Researchers
Chapter 25. Principles
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