Serotyping for Homotransplantation
- 14 November 1968
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 279 (20) , 1101-1103
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm196811142792007
Abstract
TWO recent developments have greatly changed the outlook of histocompatibility testing in clinical kidney transplantation. The first is the dramatic advances made in the area of serologic typing of leukocytes. The Third Histocompatibility Testing Workshop held in Torino, Italy, in June, 1967, showed that many laboratories are now identifying the same leukocyte antigens with considerable precision and that these antigens for the most part belong to a single complex system called HL-A.1 The second development has been the accumulation of evidence that these antigens function as histocompatibility antigens influencing kidney function, renal histology2 and survival of transplants3 from related donors. . . .Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serotyping for HomotransplantationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1968
- SEROTYPING FOR HOMOTRANSPLANTATION. X. SURVIVAL OF 196 GRAFTED KIDNEYS SUBSEQUENT TO TYPINGTransplantation, 1967
- LIGHT AND ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC STUDY OF BIOPSIES FROM THIRTY‐THREE HUMAN RENAL ALLOGRAFTS AND AN ISOGRAFT 13/4–21/2 YEARS AFTER TRANSPLANTATION*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1966