"Medicine & Public Health." . . "Medicine & Public Health" . "Plazenta." . . "Kurt Benirschke" . . "Médecine." . . "Medicine/Public Health, general." . . "Placenta (patologia)" . . "Choroby łożyska patomorfologia." . . "Anatomie pathologique." . . "Diseases." . . "Obstetrics/Perinatology." . . "Obstetrics/Perinatology" . . . . "Online-Publikation" . . . . . . . . . "PATHOLOGY OF THE HUMAN PLACENTA, SECOND EDITION, is both an exhaustive treatment of normal development and a comprehen- sive examination of pathologic conditions of the human pla- centa. The work is intended to serveas a reference work for the practicing pathologist and obstetrician. Based on exten- sive experience with placentas from over 50000 deliveries, PATHOLOGY OF THE HUMAN PLACENTA correlates these voluminous research findings with fetal outcome. Many aspects of the legal climate prevailing with respect to the relation between the placenta and perinatal damage are discussed."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "The Pathology of the human placenta"@en . "The pathology of the human placenta"@en . "The pathology of the human placenta" . . . . . . . "Pathology of the human placenta [Hauptbd.]" . . "Pathology of the Human Placenta"@en . "Pathology of the Human Placenta" . . . . . . . . "Pathology of the human placenta" . "Pathology of the human placenta"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Pathology of the human Placenta" . . . . . . . . . "Pathology of the Human Placenta remains the most comprehensive and authoritative text in the field. It provides extensive information on the normal placenta, encompassing physiology, metabolism, and endocrinology, and covers placental diseases in great detail. The conditions discussed include shape aberrations, villous alterations and maldevelopment, erythroblastosis fetalis and hydrops fetalis, transplacental hemorrhage, fetal storage disorders, diverse maternal diseases, and infectious diseases. Further chapters are devoted to abortions, molar pregnancies, trophoblastic neoplasms, benign tumors, and multiple pregnancies. Legal considerations are carefully explored, and this new edition also includes a completely new chapter on artificial reproductive technology. In other respects, too, the book has been extensively revised and expanded, with wide-ranging updates that reflect the most recent progress in the field. Some 800 illustrations are included, many of them in color. The detailed index has been further improved and tables updated. Pathology of the Human Placenta will be of enormous value to pathologists and obstetrician-gynecologists alike."@en . "Pathology of the Human Placenta remains the most comprehensive and authoritative text in the field. It provides extensive information on the normal placenta, encompassing physiology, metabolism, and endocrinology, and covers placental diseases in great detail. The conditions discussed include shape aberrations, villous alterations and maldevelopment, erythroblastosis fetalis and hydrops fetalis, transplacental hemorrhage, fetal storage disorders, diverse maternal diseases, and infectious diseases. Further chapters are devoted to abortions, molar pregnancies, trophoblastic neoplasms, benign tumors, and multiple pregnancies. Legal considerations are carefully explored, and this new edition also includes a completely new chapter on artificial reproductive technology. In other respects, too, the book has been extensively revised and expanded, with wide-ranging updates that reflect the most recent progress in the field. Some 800 illustrations are included, many of them in color. The detailed index has been further improved and tables updated. Pathology of the Human Placenta will be of enormous value to pathologists and obstetrician-gynecologists alike." . . "This presentation of the diseases of the placenta differs in many ways from the first such treatment in these volumes by the eminent Robert Meyer. It is a deliberate attempt to bring together the practical information which has been gathered about the pathology of this complex organ and to make it available to the practicing pathologist as well as clinician. Despite the ready availability of the placenta for study, the pathologist is often ill-prepared to interpret lesions which he may find. Moreover, it has been difficult for him to find reference material, published commonly in journals and books with which he is not familiar. Further more, the interpretation of lesions affecting the placenta seemed less challenging since the organ had served its function, was to be discarded and presumably little of significance could be expected from such a retrospective study. Recently, with new emphasis on maternal and fetal health and disease, it has become apparent that knowledge of pathologic changes in the placenta often provides a unique insight into antenatal events. Thus, there has been an abundance of publications in this field in recent years, several in book form. These and the most important older investigations on the morbid anatomy of the human pla centa are here reviewed. This book has been written with a special point of view, however, which reflects our own bias."@en . . . . . . "Most obstetricians and pediatricians would agree that the examination of the pla centa often helps to explain an abnormal neonatal outcome. As early as in 1892, Bal lantyne wrote that A diseased faetus without its placenta is an imperfect specimen, and a description of a foetal malady, unless accompanied by a notice of the placental condition, is incomplete. Deductions drawn from such a case cannot be considered as conclusive, for in the missing placenta or cord may have existed the cause of the disease and death. During intrauterine life the foetus, the membranes, the cord and the placenta form an organic whole, and disease of any part must react upon and affect the others. Similar thoughts were succinctly detailed in Price's discussion of his concept of the \"prenatal biases\" as they affected twins. His contribution also admonishes us that placental study is a sine qua non for a more perfect understanding of fetal develop ment (1950). Despite all this understanding of the past and appreciation for placen tal disease, great resistance still exists to performing the task of placental examination routinely. For many pathologists, therefore, the placenta has remained a mysterious organ." . . "Completey reorganized - a practical, how-to guide to placental examination plus the most authoritative reference available on all aspects of the normal and abnormal placenta. New chapters have been added on: Normative Values and Tables, Microscopic Survey and Histopathological Approach to Villous Alterations. More extensive indexing help meet the daily demands of bothe novice and experienced placental pathologists."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Advances in genetics and molecular biology make the study of the placenta one of vast diagnostic and legal importance. Useful for pathologists and obstetrician-gynecologists, this text deals with pathology of the human placenta. It talks about the aspects relating to the field, and includes 173 color illustrations."@en . "\"Pathology of the Human Placenta remains the most comprehensive and authoritative text in the field. It provides extensive information on the normal placenta, encompassing physiology, metabolism, and endocrinology, and covers placental diseases in great detail. The conditions discussed include shape aberrations, villous alterations and maldevelopment, erythroblastosis fetalis and hydrops fetalis, transplacental hemorrhage, fetal storage disorders, diverse maternal diseases, and infectious diseases. Further chapters are devoted to abortions, molar pregnancies, trophoblastic neoplasms, benign tumors, and multiple pregnancies. Legal considerations are carefully explored, and this new edition also includes a completely new chapter on artificial reproductive technology. In other respects, too, the book has been extensively revised and expanded, with wide-ranging updates that reflect the most recent progress in the field. Some 800 illustrations are included, many of them in color. The detailed index has been further improved and tables updated. Pathology of the Human Placenta will be of enormous value to pathologists and obstetrician-gynecologists alike.\"--Publisher's website." . . . . . . "The Pathology of the Human Placenta"@en . "The Pathology of the Human Placenta" . . . . . . . . . "Handbuch" . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Pathology of the Human Placenta remains the most comprehensive and authoritative text in the field. It provides extensive information on the normal placenta, encompassing physiology, metabolism, and endocrinology, and covers the full range of placental diseases in great detail. Further chapters are devoted to abortions, molar pregnancies, multiple pregnancies, and legal considerations. This sixth edition of the book has been extensively revised and expanded to reflect the most recent progress in the field, and a brand new chapter has been added on artificial reproductive technology. Some 800 i"@en . . . "Electronic books" . . "Electronic books"@en . . . . . "Anatomi." . . "Plazentakrankheit." . . "Plazentakrankheit" . "Placenta Diseases." . . "Placenta -- Diseases." . "Pathologie." . . "patológia." . . "Embriologia humana." . . "Placenta pathology." . . "Placenta Pathology." . "Placenta Pathology" . "Placenta pathology" . "Medicine." . . "Maladies du placenta." . . "Placenta anatomopathologie." . . "Placenta Anatomopathologie." . "placenta." . . "Placenta." . "Plazentakrankheit Handbuch." . . "MEDICAL Gynecology & Obstetrics." . . "Placenta Diseases pathology." . . "Obstetrics." . . "Placenta Maladies." . . "Placenta - Maladies." . "Placenta maladies." . . . "Pathology." . . "pathology." . "Łożysko patomorfologia." . .