An Analysis of the Application and Reproducibility of the NIH Consensus Guidelines for the Histologic Diagnosis of Gastrointestinal Acute Graft Versus Host Disease
Publication
, Conference
Cardona, DM; Shealy, MJ; Bentley, RC; Veras, E
Published in: LABORATORY INVESTIGATION
2012
Duke Scholars
Published In
LABORATORY INVESTIGATION
ISSN
0023-6837
Publication Date
2012
Volume
92
Start / End Page
156A / 157A
Related Subject Headings
- Pathology
- 3202 Clinical sciences
- 1103 Clinical Sciences
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Cardona, D. M., Shealy, M. J., Bentley, R. C., & Veras, E. (2012). An Analysis of the Application and Reproducibility of the NIH Consensus Guidelines for the Histologic Diagnosis of Gastrointestinal Acute Graft Versus Host Disease. In LABORATORY INVESTIGATION (Vol. 92, pp. 156A-157A).
Cardona, D. M., M. J. Shealy, R. C. Bentley, and E. Veras. “An Analysis of the Application and Reproducibility of the NIH Consensus Guidelines for the Histologic Diagnosis of Gastrointestinal Acute Graft Versus Host Disease.” In LABORATORY INVESTIGATION, 92:156A-157A, 2012.
Cardona DM, Shealy MJ, Bentley RC, Veras E. An Analysis of the Application and Reproducibility of the NIH Consensus Guidelines for the Histologic Diagnosis of Gastrointestinal Acute Graft Versus Host Disease. In: LABORATORY INVESTIGATION. 2012. p. 156A-157A.
Cardona, D. M., et al. “An Analysis of the Application and Reproducibility of the NIH Consensus Guidelines for the Histologic Diagnosis of Gastrointestinal Acute Graft Versus Host Disease.” LABORATORY INVESTIGATION, vol. 92, 2012, pp. 156A-157A.
Cardona DM, Shealy MJ, Bentley RC, Veras E. An Analysis of the Application and Reproducibility of the NIH Consensus Guidelines for the Histologic Diagnosis of Gastrointestinal Acute Graft Versus Host Disease. LABORATORY INVESTIGATION. 2012. p. 156A-157A.
Published In
LABORATORY INVESTIGATION
ISSN
0023-6837
Publication Date
2012
Volume
92
Start / End Page
156A / 157A
Related Subject Headings
- Pathology
- 3202 Clinical sciences
- 1103 Clinical Sciences