1. Structural analysis of the respiratory tract;Jeffery, P.K.; Corrin, B.
2. Mast cells in the human alveolar wall: an electromicroscopic study;Fox, B.; Bull, T.B.; Guz, A.;J Clin Pathol,1981
3. Mast cells in bronchoalveolar lumen of patients with bronchial asthma. Am Rev Respir Dis the generation of large amounts of prostaglandin D2,3' a prostanoid produced by mast cells but not by basophils.32 The correlations between cell associated histamine and mast cell counts in our study were;Tomioka, M.; Ida, S.; Shindoh, Y.; Ishihara, T.; Takishima, T.,1984
4. Mast cell hyperplasia and degranulation in Crohn';Dvorak, A.M.,1979
5. Human intestinal somewhat better than those reported by Tomioka et mucosal mast cells: expanded population in untreated al.4 On the basis of the tabular data presented in their paper for 26 subjects studied, an unweighted linear regression of histamine content against mast cell numbers per 106 nucleated cells give coefficients for a linear regression of 0.43 (p < 0.05) and for a coeliac disease;Strobel, S.; Busuttil, A.; Ferguson, A.;Gut,1983