Chorionic Villi
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Subject Areas on Research
- Chorionic villus ultrastructure in type II glycogen storage disease (Pompe's disease).
- Cross-Reactive Dengue Virus Antibodies Augment Zika Virus Infection of Human Placental Macrophages.
- Cytogenetics and mechanisms of spontaneous abortions: increased apoptosis and decreased cell proliferation in chromosomally abnormal villi.
- Cytokine expression by first-trimester human chorionic villi.
- Defective pericyte recruitment of villous stromal vessels as the possible etiologic cause of hydropic change in complete hydatidiform mole.
- Expression of surface CD1d in the extravillous trophoblast cells of early gestational placenta is downregulated in a manner dependent on trophoblast differentiation.
- Extra-placental expression of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1, (Flt-1) and soluble Flt-1 (sFlt-1), by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in normotensive and preeclamptic pregnant women.
- First-trimester human chorionic villi express both immunoregulatory and inflammatory cytokines: a role for interleukin-10 in regulating the cytokine network of pregnancy.
- Gestational trophoblastic disease with coexistent normal fetus: evaluation by ultrasound-guided chorionic villus sampling.
- Inflammasome signaling in human placental trophoblasts regulates immune defense against Listeria monocytogenes infection.
- Intravillous eicosanoid compartmentalization and regulation of placental blood flow.
- Isolated sulfite oxidase deficiency: mutation analysis and DNA-based prenatal diagnosis.
- Phosphorus 31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy of perifused human placental villi under varying oxygen concentrations.
- Prenatal diagnosis of molybdenum cofactor deficiency by assay of sulphite oxidase activity in chorionic villus samples.
- Risk factors for uteroplacental vascular compromise and inflammation.
- The Immunology of Syncytialized Trophoblast.
- The villous stromal constituents of complete hydatidiform mole differ histologically in very early pregnancy from the normally developing placenta.