Ultrasound of Mouse Fetal Development and Human Correlates (Reproductive Medicine and Assisted Reproductive Techniques Series) 1st Edition
by Mary C. Peavey (Author), Sarah K. Dotters-Katz (Author)
Fetal development in the mouse is routinely and increasingly utilized for advancing translational research and medical innovation for human obstetrical care. This is the first and only manual to provide necessary content on how this should be handled for accurate and effective data collection. Detailed descriptions and examples demonstrate how researchers and clinicians can use murine fetal and obstetrical data to improve future human applications in diseases such as infertility, recurrent pregnancy loss, intrauterine fetal growth restriction, placental insufficiency, and intrauterine fetal demise, as well as organ-specific developmental disease.
Product Details
Product Details
- Publisher : CRC Press; 1st edition (May 6, 2021)
- Language : English
- Digital eBook : 100 pages

Anatomy of Neuropsychiatry: The New Anatomy of the Basal Forebrain and Its Implications for Neuropsychiatric Illness 1st Edition
Atlas of Early Zebrafish Brain Development: A Tool for Molecular Neurogenetics
Genetics: From Genes to Genomes, 7th Edition (PDF)
First Aid Step 1 Express Videos 2015 (USMLE-Rx)
Core Concepts in Pharmacology (5th Edition)
Get Fit, Stay Fit, 7th Edition
Atlas of Urinary Cytopathology: With Histopathologic Correlations 1st Edition
Surgical Anatomy of the Ocular Adnexa: A Clinical Approach (Ophthalmology Monographs)
A Comprehensive Guide to Nanoparticles in Medicine (PDF)
Telemedicine and Electronic Medicine
Medicines, Ethics and Practice: The Professional Guide for Pharmacists
Genetic Association Studies: Background, Conduct, Analysis, Interpretation
Pharmacology of Ocular Therapeutics (PDF)
Antibiotic Basics for Clinicians: The ABCs of Choosing the Right Antibacterial Agent 2nd
The Johns Hopkins Internal Medicine Board Review: Certification and Recertification, 5th Edition (PDF)
Psychological Insights for Understanding COVID-19 and Media and Technology (PDF) 

