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Immunoglobulin Levels In Spinal Fluid And Saliva By Direct Immunochemical Assay And Microscopic Measurements, Hajime Hayashi, Gerald A. Logrippo, Mary Perry Dec 1970

Immunoglobulin Levels In Spinal Fluid And Saliva By Direct Immunochemical Assay And Microscopic Measurements, Hajime Hayashi, Gerald A. Logrippo, Mary Perry

Henry Ford Hospital Medical Journal

The immunochemical procedure used in this hospital for serum immunoglobulins (Igs) has been modified to increase sensitivity (5-to-20-fold) so that minute quantities of immunoglobulins can now be measured directly in unconcentrated body fluids. Normal spinal fluid Ig levels (±2 S.D. from normal means) were found to be: 0.01-0.21 mg/100 ml for IgA; 0.5-2.50 mg/100 for IgG: and no detectable quantities for IgM. Normal (pooled) salivary Ig levels were found to be 0.01-2.25 mg/100 ml for IgA: trace quandties to 1.85 mg/100 ml for IgG: and no detectable quantities for IgM. Spinal fluid and salivary Igs were assayed in 227 adults …


Publications Of The Staff Of The Henry Ford Hospital And The Edsel B. Ford Institute For Medical Research Dec 1970

Publications Of The Staff Of The Henry Ford Hospital And The Edsel B. Ford Institute For Medical Research

Henry Ford Hospital Medical Journal

No abstract provided.


Judicial Review--Professional Association--Inquiry Into Exclusion From Membership, Charles Blaine Myers Jr. Sep 1970

Judicial Review--Professional Association--Inquiry Into Exclusion From Membership, Charles Blaine Myers Jr.

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Better Care At Less Cost Without Miracles, Edmund K. Faltermayer Jan 1970

Better Care At Less Cost Without Miracles, Edmund K. Faltermayer

MCV/Q, Medical College of Virginia Quarterly

Our present system of medical care is not a system at all. The majority of physicians, operating alone as private entrepreneurs, constitute an army of pushcart vendors in an age of supermarkets. Most patients pay by the cumbersome "fee-for-service" or piecework method, which involves separate billing for visits to doctors, shots, x-rays, laboratory tests, surgery, anesthesia, hospital room and board, etc., etc. The American hospital system, as Herman M. and Anne R. Somers of Princeton University said in their book, Medicare and the Hospitals, "is largely a figure of speech," the result of a haphazard growth of isolated, uncoordinated institutions.


Multiphasic Health Screening, Robert W. Jessee Jan 1970

Multiphasic Health Screening, Robert W. Jessee

MCV/Q, Medical College of Virginia Quarterly

Although scientifically unproven, general empirical agreement supports the notion that the early detection of disease is beneficial in the control of the disease process. The aim is to discover and cure conditions which have already produced cellular or biochemical change but which have not so far reached a stage associated with symptoms for which medical aid is sought spontaneously (Wilson and Jungner, 1968). The various methods of early disease detection have evolved along with contemporary philosophical and technological developments.


British Medical Practice - Some Recent Innovations, Maurice Wood Jan 1970

British Medical Practice - Some Recent Innovations, Maurice Wood

MCV/Q, Medical College of Virginia Quarterly

This presentation might be better labelled "A worm's eye view of the National Health Service" (NHS) as it covers of necessity only a limited spectrum of that program. General practice as a discipline is infinitely variable in its application; and factors of geography, practical size, social classifications of population, and employment patterns can produce enormous differences in the details of practice organization.


Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 5, 1970) Jan 1970

Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 5, 1970)

Virginia Dental Journal

No abstract provided.


Health Services In Australia, D. J. R. Snow Jan 1970

Health Services In Australia, D. J. R. Snow

MCV/Q, Medical College of Virginia Quarterly

The establishment of the Federal Health Service stemmed from the need to exclude dangerous infectious diseases from Australia. Disease such as smallpox and plague were constant threats to a country newly settled by Europeans with maritime ties, and cholera was endemic in neighboring countries. There were also the less immediate but acknowledged risks of the introduction into Australia of yellow fever and louse typhus. In other words, the earliest Federal Health Service was essentially a quarantine service -established on the basis of meticulous maritime quarantine and supported by a specially trained staff of quarantine medical officers with a chain of …


Mcv/Q, Medical College Of Virginia Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 3 Jan 1970

Mcv/Q, Medical College Of Virginia Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 3

MCV/Q, Medical College of Virginia Quarterly

No abstract provided.


Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 4, 1970) Jan 1970

Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 4, 1970)

Virginia Dental Journal

No abstract provided.


Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 1, 1970) Jan 1970

Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 1, 1970)

Virginia Dental Journal

No abstract provided.


Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 2, 1970) Jan 1970

Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 2, 1970)

Virginia Dental Journal

No abstract provided.


Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 6, 1970) Jan 1970

Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 6, 1970)

Virginia Dental Journal

No abstract provided.


Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 3, 1970) Jan 1970

Virginia Dental Journal (Vol. 47, No. 3, 1970)

Virginia Dental Journal

No abstract provided.