1. Durr, W. T. (1984). Humanistic science and the public.The Public Historian, 6, 49–79
2. Palmer, R. H. (1972). Bile acids, liver injury, and liver disease.Arch. Intern. Med., 130, 606–17
3. Fischer, C. D., Cooper, N. S., Rothschild, M. A. and Mosbach, E. H. (1974). Effect of dietary chenodeoxycholic acid and lithocholic acid in the rabbit.Am. J. Dig. Dis., 18, 877–86
4. Gilmore, I. T. and Hofmann, A. F. (1980). Altered drug metabolism and elevated serum bile acids in liver disease: a unified pharmacokinetic explanation.Gastroenterology, 78, 177–9
5. Boyd, G. S., Merrick, M. V., Monks, R. and Thomas, I. L. (1981). 75Se-labeled bile acid analogues. New radiopharmaceuticals for investigating the enterohepatic circulation.J. Nucl. Med., 22, 720–5