979 resultados para Edinburgh University Library.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Description based on: 15 July, 1864; title from cover.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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[Early Conceptual Sketches], untitled. Ink sketches on tracing paper, 18 x 22 1/4 inches [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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[Early Conceptual Sketches], untitled. Blue ink sketches on tracing paper, 12x29 inches [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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[Early Conceptual Sketches], untitled. Green ink sketches on tracing paper, initialed, 18 x 28 1/2 inches [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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[Conceptual Sketch], untitled. Blue ink sketch on tracing paper with green, orange and gray marker coloring, 12x32 inches
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[Section], untitled. Digital image only of black ink sketch on steno pad paper, 6x9 inches
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Master microform held by: RPB.
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The enormous progress that has been made in liver transplantation over the past two decades has culminated in survival approaching 90% at 12 months. The success of the procedure combined with the widening spectrum of disease processes deemed amenable to liver transplantation has meant that there are too few donors for those awaiting transplantation. This has extrapolated to many patients having such advanced disease by the time a suitable donor liver is available, that they are almost non-transplantable. The immediate options facing the transplant community are to decrease the number of patients listed or to increase the number of living donor transplants. Alternatives to liver transplantation such as hepatocyte transplantation, gene therapy, xenotransplantation and the bioartificial liver are being sought but, at best, are some way from clinical application. It is anticipated that a number of liver diseases that are indications for liver transplantation at this time will have progression arrested or will be cured by medical therapy in the future.
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v.44:no.2(1955)
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v.24:no.26(1943)
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University libraries are well positioned to run or support OER production and publication operations. Many university libraries already have the technical, service, and policy infrastructure in place that would provide economies of scale for nascent and mature OER projects. Given a number of aligning factors, the University of Michigan (U-M) has an excellent opportunity to integrate Open.Michigan, its OER operation, into the University Library. This paper presents the case for greater university library involvement in OER projects generally, with U-M as a case study.