Ghadially's Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix
Alana Burrell
Sold by AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germany
AbeBooks Seller since 14 August 2006
New - Hardcover
Condition: New
Ships from Germany to U.S.A.
Quantity: 2 available
Add to basketSold by AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germany
AbeBooks Seller since 14 August 2006
Condition: New
Quantity: 2 available
Add to basketNeuware - This established handbook is unique in illustrating and reviewing the cell and extracellular matrix, organelle by organelle (with numerous subsections) with emphasis on human pathology. Anyone studying normal or pathological tissues whether human, animal, or tissue culture, by conventional transmission electron microscopy for diagnosis or research, will use this book to understand what it is they are examining-without having to go through large volumes of previously published articles.
Seller Inventory # 9781032811895
This established handbook is unique in illustrating and reviewing the cell and extracellular matrix, organelle by organelle (with numerous subsections) with emphasis on human pathology. Anyone studying normal or pathological tissues whether human, animal, or tissue culture, by conventional transmission electron microscopy for diagnosis or research, will use this book to understand what it is they are examining―without having to go through large volumes of previously published articles.
Key Features:
Bart E. Wagner was born in The Hague, Holland, to Dutch parents in 1958 and moved to Sheffield, England, in 1960. He went to secondary school in Bakewell, Derbyshire. In 1976 he went to Portsmouth University in order to part study Marine Biology and came out with a BSc (Hons) in Biology. Fortunately, the degree was sufficiently general to enable him to take up a position as a trainee Biomedical Scientist in the Histopathology department in 1979 at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital NHS Trust in Sheffield. He passed the Institute of Biomedical Science (IBMS) Histopathology and Cytology Special Final in 1982, which for professional purposes is counted as equivalent to a MSc, and which made him a Fellow of the Institute of Biomedical Science. The project for the fellowship exam was a study of asteroid bodies in sarcoidosis which included histochemistry, immunohistochemistry and, where his interest in electron microscopy started, EM - all done whilst working in the main Histopathology laboratory. In 1984 he became the head of the electron microscopy section of the Histopathology Department at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital, sharing the hospital EM facilities with his counterparts at the Medical School, until renal pathology was moved to the Northern General Hospital in Sheffield in 1990. In 2012 he was moved back to the Royal Hallamshire Hospital where he continues to this day as head of the EM section.
In 1984, there were EM facilities in 5 hospitals serving 8 departments in Sheffield. For technological reasons in diagnostic virology and tumour diagnosis, EM samples for those tests decreased to the extent that by 2005 rationalisation of diagnostic EM facilities in Sheffield had centralised to Bart. In addition, before improvements in molecular genetics (in approximately 2019) he received numerous paediatric liver samples from King’s College Hospital, London, and became the national centre for EM of skin for diagnosis of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome.
In 1997 Bart was awarded an IBMS travel fellowship to visit Professor Feroze N Ghadially in Ottawa, Canada, shortly after the 4th edition of Ultrastructural Pathology of the Cell and Matrix was published. Bart arrived in Prof Ghadially’s emeritus office with a large stack of electron micrograph photographic prints for his expert opinion. He was able to comment on most of the images - but not all - which spurred Bart into organising a 2-day national diagnostic EM conference in Sheffield in 1998 - followed a year later by the formal founding of the Association of Clinical Electron Microscopists (ACEM). He was the ACEM meeting secretary, organising annual meetings as a companion society to PathSoc until 2019. He is still on the executive of ACEM, but in the capacity of education and training secretary. He has been a TEM external quality assurance assessor for NEQAS based in Newcastle since 2018 to the present day. He has lectured on many diagnostic EM related subjects at numerous national and international meetings and on MSc courses. He has contributed EM to over 100 pathology publications.
In 2008 he set up and completed an IBMS Diploma of Expert Practice in Ultrastructural Pathology - for which this updated book is essential reading. He is now an examiner for this qualification.
Associate Professor John Stirling, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia. John has extensive experience in electron microscopy and cell ultrastructure gained during a career that spans almost sixty years. He started his career as an electron microscopist in 1965 in the Zoology Department of the University of Bristol (UK). After three years working with insect and animal tissues, he moved on to pursue a degree at Cardiff University (Wales), graduating with Honours in Zoology and Botany. As a postgraduate he then spent three years at the Tenovus Institute (Welsh National School of Medicine, Cardiff, Wales), specialising in breast cancer research, and subsequently publishing the first ultrastructural descriptions of the normal female mammary gland. John’s next move was to University College, Dublin (Republic of Ireland), as the inaugural manager of the Biological Sciences Electron Microscope Unit. In this role he oversaw the facility’s development and supported a range of biological research projects. While in Dublin, he played a key part in initiating the first Irish national electron microscopy conference, and was a founding member and Chairperson of the Irish Society of Electron Microscopy. In 1984 John moved to South Australia, becoming a diagnostic electron microscopist in Anatomical Pathology, principally at Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide. Diagnostic ultrastructural pathology and immunogold labelling techniques were his specialties until he retired as the manager of the State’s Centre for Ultrastructural Pathology (SA Pathology, Adelaide).
At Flinders Medical Centre, John became involved with Flinders University where he taught in biomedical courses, and was a member of the Medical Admissions Committee. John helped to establish the Bachelor of Medical Science, was a Topic Coordinator, and continues to contribute to the course. John’s other major professional involvement is with the Australian Institute of Medical and Clinical Science (AIMS). As a member of the AIMS South Australian/Northern Territory committee he has contributed to many local and national conferences as an organiser, presenter and workshop facilitator; he was also the co-editor of the Institute’s Journal, the Australian Journal of Medical Science. John received the Institute’s Gold Medal and was made an Honorary Life member in 2016.
John’s publications cover immunogold labelling and a range of ultrastructural- and pathology-related topics. He has contributed chapters to a number of popular text books, including: Bancroft’s Theory and Practice of Histological Techniques (Elsevier); Laboratory Histopathology - A Complete Reference (Churchill Livingstone); and Antigen Retrieval Techniques: Immunohistochemistry and Molecular Morphology (Eaton Publishing). John also initiated, part-authored and was the Editor-in-Chief of Diagnostic electron microscopy: a practical guide to interpretation and technique (RMS/John Wiley). John has been a member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, is an Associate Fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia, a Fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society, and a member of the European Microscopy Society. John was the winner of the Specialist Area prize in the Inaugural South Australian Allied, Scientific and Complementary Health Excellence Awards in 2008. This was for his work on quality assurance for diagnostic electron microscopy, now established as an external quality assurance program run by the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia (RCPA QAP).
Dr Lucy Collinson is an electron microscopist with a background in microbiology and cell biology. She has a degree and PhD in Medical Microbiology and carried out post-doctoral research with Professor Colin Hopkins at the MRC Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology (UCL) and Imperial College London, investigating membrane trafficking pathways in lysosome-related organelles in mammalian cells using light and electron microscopy as key techniques. She has run a series of biological electron microscopy facilities since 2004, at UCL and then at the Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, which became part of the new Francis Crick Institute in 2015. With a team of 10 electron microscopists and 3 physicists, she oversees more than 100 research projects with more than 60 research groups within the Francis Crick Institute, imaging across scales from proteins to whole organisms. Her microscopy and technology development interests include volume EM, correlative imaging techniques, cryo-microscopy, X-ray microscopy, image analysis, and microscope design and prototyping. Her group is using Citizen Science to gather hundreds of thousands of annotations of EM images to train deep machine learning algorithms to automatically recognise organelles in EM images through the Etch a Cell project on the Zooniverse platform. She is committed to open science through sharing of image data, protocols, software and hardware designs. She has co-authored more than 100 research and review papers, given more than 100 invited and keynote talks, and has sat on more than 45 international advisory boards, panels, and committees in advanced imaging.
Dr Alana Burrell started her career by training in Veterinary Medicine at the Royal Veterinary College London (UK). After qualifying as a vet in 2015, she was accepted onto a joint PhD programme, split between the Royal Veterinary College London and Oxford Brookes University (UK). Her PhD work included the use of light and electron microscopy to characterise organelle diversity and dynamics for the Apicomplexan parasite Eimeria tenella. After completing her PhD, Alana moved to a position at the Francis Crick Institute in London (UK) within the Electron Microscopy Science Technology Platform (EM STP). In this role she has worked with a variety of biological samples (2D and 3D cell culture systems, bacterial and parasitic pathogens, animal tissue, and human tissue) and used both 2D and 3D advanced light and electron imaging techniques. She currently has a postdoctoral role, based within the EM STP at the Francis Crick Institute and as a visiting researcher at Imperial College London (UK), working on a large multimodal imaging project investigating antibody- mediated kidney transplant rejection.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
General Terms and Conditions and Customer Information / Privacy Policy
I. General Terms and Conditions
§ 1 Basic provisions
(1) The following terms and conditions apply to all contracts that you conclude with us as a provider (AHA-BUCH GmbH) via the Internet platforms AbeBooks and/or ZVAB. Unless otherwise agreed, the inclusion of any of your own terms and conditions used by you will be objected to
(2) A consumer within the meaning of the following regulations is any natural person who concludes...
**Right of withdrawal for consumers **
(A consumer is any natural person who concludes a legal transaction for purposes that can predominantly be attributed neither to their commercial nor their independent professional activity.)
Cancellation
Withdrawal
You have the right to revoke this contract within fourteen days without giving reasons.
The revocation period is fourteen days from the day,
on which you or a third party named by you, who is not the carrier, has taken possession of the goods, provided that you have ordered one or more goods within the framework of a uniform order and these are or will be delivered uniformly;
on which you or a third party named by you, who is not the carrier, has taken possession of the last goods, provided that you have ordered several goods within the framework of a single order and these are delivered separately;
on which you or a third party named by you, who is not the carrier, has taken possession of the last partial shipment or the last piece, provided that you have ordered goods that are delivered in several partial shipments or pieces;
In order to exercise your right of withdrawal, you must inform us (AHA-BUCH GmbH, Garlebsen 48, 37574 Einbeck, telephone number: 05563 9996039, fax number: 05563 9995974, e-mail address: service@aha-buch.de) of your decision to revoke this contract by means of a clear declaration (e.B. a letter sent by post, fax or e-mail). You can use the attached model withdrawal form, but this is not mandatory.
To comply with the revocation period, it is sufficient that you send the notification of the exercise of the right of revocation before the expiry of the revocation period.
Consequences of revocation
If you withdraw from this contract, we shall reimburse you all payments that we have received from you, including delivery costs (with the exception of the additional costs resulting from the fact that you have chosen a different type of delivery than the cheapest standard delivery offered by us), immediately and at the latest within fourteen days from the day on which we received the notification of your revocation of this contract.
For this repayment, we will use the same means of payment that you used for the original transaction, unless expressly agreed otherwise with you; in no case will you be charged any fees for this repayment.
We may withhold reimbursement until we have received the goods back or until you have provided proof that you have returned the goods, whichever is the earlier.
You must return or hand over the goods to us immediately and in any case at the latest within fourteen days from the day on which you inform us of the revocation of this contract. The deadline is met if you send the goods before the expiry of the period of fourteen days.
You bear the direct costs of returning the goods.
You only have to pay for any loss of value of the goods if this loss of value is due to handling of the goods that is not necessary to check the nature, characteristics and functioning of the goods.
Reasons for exclusion or extinction
The right of revocation does not apply to contracts
The right of revocation expires prematurely in the case of contracts
Sample withdrawal form
(If you want to cancel the contract, please fill out this form and send it back.)
To AHA-BUCH GmbH, Garlebsen 48, 37574 Einbeck, fax number: 05563 9995974, e-mail address: service@aha-buch.de :
I/we () hereby revoke the contract concluded by me/us () for the purchase of the following goods ()/
the provision of the following service ()
Ordered on ()/ received on ()
Name of the consumer(s)
Address of the consumer(s)
Signature of the consumer(s) (only in case of notification on paper)
Date
(*) Delete as appropriate.
We ship your order after we received them
for articles on hand latest 24 hours,
for articles with overnight supply latest 48 hours.
In case we need to order an article from our supplier our dispatch time depends on the reception date of the articles, but the articles will be shipped on the same day.
Our goal is to send the ordered articles in the fastest, but also most efficient and secure way to our customers.
| Order quantity | 30 to 40 business days | 7 to 14 business days |
|---|---|---|
| First item | £ 62.88 | £ 71.51 |
Delivery times are set by sellers and vary by carrier and location. Orders passing through Customs may face delays and buyers are responsible for any associated duties or fees. Sellers may contact you regarding additional charges to cover any increased costs to ship your items.