Overview
- Editors:
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Jan Marrink
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Department of Internal Medicine, Div of Immunochemistry, University Hospital Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands
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Martin H. Rijswijk
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Department of Internal Medicine, Div of Rheumatology, University Hospital Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands
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Table of contents (40 chapters)
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Chemical and Ultrastructural Aspects
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- Gunnar Husby, Knut Sletten
Pages 23-34
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- Tsuranobu Shirahama, Alan S. Cohen
Pages 51-57
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Clinical Aspects
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- Sven Janssen, Martin H. van Rijswijk, Sijtze Meijer, Lucas Ruinen, Gjalt K. van der Hem
Pages 61-72
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- Tsuranobu Shirahama, Alan S. Cohen, Martha Skinner
Pages 83-89
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- Martha Skinner, Tsuranobu Shirahama, Alan S. Cohen
Pages 91-98
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Pathogenesis
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- S. Bruce Dowton, Harvey R. Colten
Pages 107-113
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- D. R. van der Westhuyzen, G. A. Coetzee, F. C. de Beer
Pages 115-125
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- William G. Turnell, Mark B. Pepys
Pages 127-133
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About this book
This book is a gift from the international community of amyloid friends, presented to Professor Dr. Enno Mandema on the occasion of his retirement from the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. It is the "precipitation" of up to date knowledge of amyloidosis, as presented at the International Course on Amyloidosis in Groningen, on the 10th and 11th of October 1986. Twenty years ago, Professor Mandema invited a group of scientists, who were studying the various aspects of amyloidosis from different points of view, to discuss their mutual interest in the subject. This "First International Symposium" was held for five days in September 1967. It was a wonderful experience for the participants, as most of them had until then only read each others work in the literature. The proceedings of that symposium, which contained the "lively" dis cussions, became a text-book for the following years. Research continued, and while the book was still in preparation, the revolutionary method of "water-soluble amyloid" was published. In the following years, different amyloid proteins were discovered and the mo lecular basis of the different amyloid syndromes was elucidated. The increase in knowledge parallelled the availability of modern, ingenious and also rapid methods in the biomedical sciences.
Editors and Affiliations
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Department of Internal Medicine, Div of Immunochemistry, University Hospital Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands
Jan Marrink
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Department of Internal Medicine, Div of Rheumatology, University Hospital Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands
Martin H. Rijswijk