Extractions: ISSX Metabolism Science Please send comments, corrections, or suggestions to Webmaster@ISSX.org Conjugation Absorption Biliary excretion Genetic polymorphism Compound profiles Journal Links Scientific societies Popular Links FDA PubMed -Literature searching Pharmweb -pharmaceutical info Pharm/Tox.-Karolinska Inst. Nat.Inst.Health Nat.Lib.Med. EMEA -European Medicinal Evaluation Agency Gordon Research Conference on Drug Metabolism Eurotox -Assoc.Eur.Toxicologists and Eur.Soc.Tox.
Horizon Animal Hospital, Scottsdale Veterinary Hospital Shelters Specialty Boards Colleges societies, Academies Evet FDA Center forVet Medicine inst. For genetic Disease Control Mesa Veterinary Hospital http://www.azdogs.com/doglinks.html
Van Keuren Guide: Collections D-G correspondence and notebooks concerning a genetic study of Archeological inst.; AnthropologicalSoc. Omaha secret societies; Dobu ethnology; Chinese ethnography http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/guides/vank/D-G.htm
Extractions: Collections, D-G Darwin, Charles. 1809-1882. Naturalist. Darwin was independently wealthy and pursued much of his work at home, in Kent. His travels with the Beagle , 1831-36, set the stage for his later studies in geology, zoology, and botany. Subsequent to the publication of The Origin of Species in 1859, he was made an honorary member (1861) of the London Ethnological Society. Darwin did not specifically write upon human evolution until the later 1860s, when The Descent of Man was composed (publ. 1871), followed in 1872 by Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals . Both books were influential upon later writing and research in anthropology. Correspondence, Mss. The American Philosophical Society Library holds an extensive collection of Darwin letters, either in original or photo-copy form. The manuscript letter collection includes approximately 730 Darwin letters (B/D25.m, B/D25.L, B/D25.L1, B/D25.r, B/D25.1-361). The large groups of letters are to Charles Lyell and to George Romanes. The Library also holds photocopy or microfilm copies of almost the entirety of Darwin's known surviving correspondence, listed in A Calendar of the Correspondence of Charles Darwin, 1821-1882
Lila's BioResearch Ethics Pages - Organizations Sciences (CIOMS) Federation of American societies for Experimental s Advisory Committeeon genetic Testing (SACGT Specimens Nat'l Human Genome Research inst. http://www.upekkha.net/orgs.html
Medical Ethics on the Web via J R Kennedy inst of Ethics Medical societies Unite Against FirearmInjuries - JAMA, Apr 2001; Consent in genetic Research in Iceland P Hauksson http://www.mic.ki.se/Diseases/k1.316.html
Extractions: Ethics in Science V Hamner ] - Virginia Tech Chemistry Department (US) Ethics on the World Wide Web PM Lester ] - School of Comm.,CSU/Fullerton (US) Applied Ethics Resources on WWW C MacDonald ] - U of British Columbia (CA) Bioethics Resources on the Web Bioethical Issues - Woodrow Wilson/Program in Biology '92 Bioethics Resources on the Web - NIH (US) Bioethics.net - U of Pennsylvania (US) Ethics in Medicine - Univ of Washington/School of Medicine (US) Bioethics Online Service , including a The US Nat'l Bioethics Advisory Commission CHB - Centre for Human Bioethics - Monash (AU) Joint Centre for Bioethics - U of Toronto (CA) The Nuffield Council on Bioethics - London (UK) Ethics Updates ed. LH Hinman ] - Univ of San Diego (US) Virtual Mentor [journal] - American Medical Association Bioethics Discussion Pages M. Bernstein ] - Los Angeles (US) Biomedical Ethics - Newsletter of the European Network for Biomedical Ethics (DE) - Bergen Univ. (NO) drze: German Reference Centre for Ethics in the Life Sciences - (DE) Ethics at UNESCO Science and Society [collection of fulltext articles] - Science Magazine '98 Links zur Ethik in der Medizin (in German) - (DE) Health Ethics Today - Health Ethics C., University of Alberta (CA)
Parasitology Resources societies. Dresden Spezielle Zoologie; University of Düsseldorf genetic Parasitology;University of Parasitology Resources compiled at the Pasteur inst. http://www.medicine.cmu.ac.th/dept/parasite/links.htm
Extractions: Parasitology Resources Societies Institutions Aisan Institute of Technology Thailand, Centre for Microbiology, Parasitology and Entomology University of Alabama , Gorgas Memorial Institute American Type Culture Collection ATCC Australian College of Tropical Medicine (GOPHER) Free University of Berlin Faculty of Veterinary Medicine University of Berne , Switzerland, Institute of Parasitology Berne Free University of Brussels Molecular Parasitology University of California at Davis , Department of Nematology University of California, San Francisco Anatomic Pathology Lab Centers for Disease Control Columbia Prebyterian Medical Center Charles University (Prague, Czech Republic) Department of Parasitology and Hydrobiology Czech Acad Sci Institute of Parasitology Technical Univ. Dresden Spezielle Zoologie University of Düsseldorf Genetic Parasitology University of Edinburgh , Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, Centre for Tropical Veterinary Medicine University of Erlangen , Nürnberg, Parasitology Goeringer Lab Molecular Parasitology Hallym University , Korea, Department of Parasitology Hebrew University Jerusalem Department of Parasitology Heinrich-Heine-University , Dusseldorf, Germany Imperial College , London Institute of Maritime and Tropical Medicine Gdynia, Poland
Calendar the Study of Islamic societies and Civilization inst., Molecular Pathogenesis Program,The Skirball inst. genetic Analysis of Malaria Sporozoite Infectivity http://record.wustl.edu/archive/1998/03-26-98/articles/calendar.html
Extractions: March 26, 1998 "Art of the '80s: Modern to Postmodern." Through April 5. Upper gallery, Gallery of Art. 935-4523. "Powerful Grace Lies in Herbs and Plants: A Joint Exhibit on Herbal Medicine." Sponsored by Missouri Botanical Garden Library and Bernard Becker Medical Library. Through April. Seventh floor, Bernard Becker Medical Library, 660 S. Euclid. 362-4235. Selections from the Washington University art collections. Through April 5. Lower galleries, Gallery of Art. 935-4523. "The Book Arts in St. Louis: 1898 to 1998." Through May 22. Special Collections, level five, Olin Library. 935-5495. "The Halftime Show." Artwork by School of Art graduate students. Opening reception March 27, 5-8 p.m. Through April 24. Lower level, West Campus. 935-4643. (See story) 7:45 p.m. French and Francophone Film Series. 7 and 9:30 p.m. Filmboard Feature Series. "Four Weddings and a Funeral." (Also March 28, same times, and March 29, 7 p.m.) Cost: $3 first visit; $2 subsequent visits. Room 100 Brown Hall. 935-5983. Midnight. Filmboard Midnight Series.
Extractions: Dr. Alfred G. Knudson Jr. has been a senior member of the scientific research staff at Fox Chase Cancer Center since 1976. A geneticist and physician, Knudson is internationally recognized for his "two-hit" theory of cancer causation, which explained the relationship between the hereditary and non-hereditary forms of a cancer and predicted the existence of anti-oncogenesgenes that can suppress cancer cell growth. This now-confirmed theory has advanced understanding of errors in the genetic program that turn normal cells into cancer cells. In honor of his contributions to biomedical science, Knudson was named a Fox Chase Distinguished Scientist and senior adviser to the president in 1992. He has been instrumental as a leader of Fox Chase's molecular oncology program since 1989. Previously, Knudson served as director of Fox Chase's Institute for Cancer Research until 1982, Center president from 1980 to 1982 and scientific director from 1982 to 1983.
Extractions: Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-viii Table of Contents, pp. ix-xvi 1. The Academy's Antecedents, pp. 1-15 2. Scientists and Scientific Organi..., pp. 16-42 3. The Incorporation and Organizati..., pp. 43-78 4. The Government Calls upon the Ac..., pp. 79-99 5. Postbellum Years and the Crisis ..., pp. 100-133 6. The End of the Nineteenth Centur..., pp. 134-164 7. The Academy Marks Its Semicenten..., pp. 165-199 8. World War I and the Creation of ..., pp. 200-241 9. The Research Council's Permanent..., pp. 242-280 10. The Twenties: New Horizons in S..., pp. 281-316 11. The Academy during the Great De..., pp. 317-346 12. The New Deal and the Science Ad..., pp. 347-381 13. The Academy in World War II, pp. 382-432 14. The Postwar Organization of Sci..., pp. 433-474 15. The Years between the Wars, pp. 475-516 16. The Academy in the Fifties B..., pp. 517-564 17. Academy Centennial, pp. 565-594 Appendix A: Act of Incorporation: N..., pp. 595-597
Extractions: Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-iv Contents, pp. v-viii William L. Brown, pp. 1-23 Kenneth Stewart Cole, pp. 24-45 Henry Eyring, pp. 46-57 Alfred Gilman, pp. 58-81 Henry Gilman, pp. 82-115 Morris Howard Hansen, pp. 116-137 Robert Paul Hanson, pp. 138-155 Robert Fleming Heizer, pp. 156-173 Frederick Seymour Hulse, pp. 174-180 Leon Orris Jacobson, pp. 190-203 Warren Kendall Lewis, pp. 204-219 Choh Hao Li, pp. 220-239 Bernd Theodor Matthias, pp. 240-259 Egon Orowan, pp. 260-319 Efraim Racker, pp. 320-347 Herschel L. Roman, pp. 348-367 Harry Lionel Shapiro, pp. 368-387 Frank Ludvig Spitzer, pp. 388-405 Merle Antony Tuve, pp. 406-423 John West Wells, pp. 424-436
Mindy's Memory - More Monkey Research Info ILAR inst LAB ANIM RESOUR JOURNAL 38(3) 142 B Adaptation and selforganizationin primate societies. West DB; York B Dietary fat, genetic predisposition, and http://www.mindysmem.org/other.html
Extractions: This page provides citations for current research on monkeys in general which does not fit into any specific Monkey Fact page (no species is specified in title,) as well as research citations for those groups of monkeys we have not as yet created pages for. As always, Mindy's Memory Primate Sanctuary does not necessarily endorse the studies presented here, but provides them for information only. Aging Studies
ORICL - Science Courses has a PhD in geophysical science from the GA inst. return to the 18th and 19th centuryphilosophical societies. to develop a full personal genetic analysis and http://www.korrnet.org/oricl/Science.html
Extractions: Location: F112, RSCC A series of seven lectures and a one-day field trip will inform students about local geology. Lecture topics are geological fundamentals, Appalachian geology, geology of TN and nearby states, groundwater basics, earthquakes and East TN, mineral resources of TN and adjacent states, and geology and environmental/land-use planning. Field trip fee will be collected at the first class. Dr. Bob Hatcher is a UT Distinguished Scientist and Professor of Geology in Tectonics and Structural Geology. He has more than 30 years of basic research experience in the Appalachians and other mountain chains. He served on faculties of Clemson Univ., FL State Univ., and the Univ. of SC. He worked in environmental assessment, radioactive waste disposal, conventional and nuclear power plant site evaluation, and petroleum resources evaluation. Dr. Peter Lemiszki received his BS in geology from Allegheny College, his MS in geophysics from Cornell Univ., and his PhD from UT. He was a research associate at ORNL, working with Dr. Hatcher, before joining the TN Division of Geology. He has conducted research in structural geology and karst hydrogeology. He is currently involved in field geologic investigations in E TN and in making geology better known to people of this region.
Lern.harvard.net/data/ldkoller.txt J Nat Cancer inst 1979;6310571064. of Immune Suppression as Induced by genetic,Therapeutic and Chemical Congress of Pacific Basin societies, Honolulu, Hawaii http://lern.harvard.net/data/ldkoller.txt
Dr. Gail L. Wright, MD - Coastal Hematology & Oncology, PC PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS societies. Cancer inst., 85 13771381, 1993. B., Nesbitt,JC, Pass, HI, Caporaso, NE, Moir, DT, Tucker, MA genetic Polymorphism of http://www.coastaloncology.com/wright.cfm
Veterinary Information Resources Evet FDA Center for Vet Medicine inst. For genetic Disease Control National AnimalDisease Center Natl societies, Academies Associations for Veterinarians. http://www.geocities.com/cfah2000/res.htm
Untitled bring meaning in huge resources of genetic information have applications in functionsof societies of multicelluar Frankenhauser, Bernhard (oli/Karolinska inst). http://www.uku.fi/english/organizations/fips/fysio984.htm
Extractions: FYSIOLOGI 4/98 *******************************CONTENTS 1 Editorial. Meetings in 1999 1 Rahastonhoitajan tervehdys 2 Message of the secretary 2 Congratulations 3 Annual Meeting of the FiPS 3 Photoes of some lecturers of FiPS annual meeting 6 Ongelmia osoitteissa 6 2nd FEPS Congress, Final Announc. 6 Web addresses 7. Calendar EDITORIAL. ANNIVERSARIES IN 1999 Honorary Member and long time President of the Finnish Physiological Society and former Chancellor and Rector of the University of Turku and the first professor of physiology of that university Kaarlo Hartiala will be 80 years next fall. Prof. Tuomas Peltonen one of the key research workers of the Heart Research Unit of that same department will be 75 years. Their students have agreed that on October 22-24, 1999 a Symposium on APhysiological Defence Mechanisms@ will be organized in Kuopio in their honor in the connection of the Annual Meeting of the Finnish Physiological Society. Please, reserve time already now.
Zoeken joint meeting of AMU and UNITAS (american and european malacological societies); Breden,F., Scott, M. Michel, E. (1987) genetic Differentiation for inst. Nat. http://www.bio.uva.nl/zma/core/00/03/20.HTML
Numero Argomento Autore and its dilemmas are clearly exclusive of certain privileged societies and groups 7Nowak R., genetic testing set for takeoff, Science 1994, 65 464 Cancer inst. http://www.centrobioetica.org/med-morale/mm_articoli/sorbone2.htm
Extractions: Abstract in Italiano The identification of Brca11 and Brca22 as the genes associated with some hereditary breast and ovarian cancers has major scientific value, but also raises many dilemmas. Genetic testing for Brca mutations has no value in general screening, and it is most often uninformative even in women with high-risk families. Its ability to predict the development of cancer in mutation carriers is still under evaluation, and available treatment options - such as lifestyle changes, close follow-up, chemoprevention, and even prophylactic surgery - do not yield complete protection against breast and ovarian cancer. Despite these major limitations, the test is now commercially available. Most often the public is mislead by the press raising false hopes for effective prevention, and thus tends to perceive genetic testing for breast cancer as a reliable screening tool. Therefore, major educational efforts are needed for lay people as well as for health-care workers. As part of the Human Genome Project, extensive debate has surrounded the social and ethical ramifications of genetics
On-line Resources societies. Dresden Spezielle Zoologie University of Duesseldorf genetic ParasitologyUniversity of Change Parasitology Resources compiled at the Pasteur inst. http://www.gzsums.edu.cn/xxgk/zyjs/bysw/resources.html
Extractions: Richard G. Margolese, MD, FRCSC Canadian Journal of Surgery Presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Surgical Society, Elora, Ont., May 13, 1994 See also: Although BCS is becoming less of a scientific controversy, its practical use is still erratic.[1] The main issue now, as reflected by the attention given in the literature over the past decade, seems to be a fear of local recurrence. Even with evidence that the various surgical approaches are equivalent, more than half of eligible patients are still treated by mastectomy.[1,3] In a consideration of the underlying biologic features of breast cancer, the difference between local recurrence and distant metastases is crucial. If local recurrence represents a lost opportunity to cure a patient, then local control becomes of paramount importance. If ultimate cure is independent of most variations in original local therapy, a less aggressive surgical approach makes sense, and cosmetic factors should be more strongly considered. The National Surgical Adjuvant Breast Project (NSABP) Protocol B-06 evaluated breast removal versus BCS. Patients were treated by total mastectomy or lumpectomy with or without postoperative radiotherapy. (Axillary dissections were done in all cases, and node-positive patients received chemotherapy.)