1. The unlabeled antibody enzyme method. In: Immunohistochemistry;Sternberger, L.A.,1979
2. Neuromuscular manifestations of conjunctiva19 20 and dental pulp.2" Much Serum myoglobin increase with muscle cell parathyroid disease. In: Vinken PJ, Bruyn less information is available about late-onset damage, and it is a more sensitive indicator GW, eds. Metabolic and Defickncy Diseases cases. A cortical brain biopsy established the than CK activity.9 Sidney et al1° have shown using an indirect immunofluorescent technique that myoglobin disappears from cardiac muscle fibres and appears only in the interstitial spaces after 30 minutes of ligation of a coronary artery. Interestingly, imof the Nervous System, part 1;Frame, B.,1976
3. Radioimmunoassay of serum myoglobin in neuromuscular diseases. J Neurol Neudiagnosis in a sporadic case ofa young adult with neuroaxonal dystrophy.22 We report a patient with juvenile-adult neuroaxonal dystrophy, in whom electron microscopy of rectal and skin biopsies verified the diagnorosurg;Askmark, H.; Osterman, P.O.; Roxin, L.E.; Venge, P.;Psychiatry,1981
4. The effect of calcium ions on the leakage of protein and enzymes from rat liver slices;Streffer, C.; Williamson, D.H.;Biochem J,1965
5. Myopathy and elevated serum enzymes in a case of hypoparathyroidism. Z more or less protracted course.5' Whether these diseases are truly different nosologic entities from the disorder first described by Hallervorden and Spatz in ment and dull affect were observed. Her performance IQ of 96 compared with the premorbid IQ of 136. There were signs of an organic syndrome on Benton visual Kinderheilk;Hower, J.; Struck, H.; Tackmann, W.; Bohlmann, H.-G.,1974