
Oxford Reviews of Reproductive Biology is published annually and provides an up-to-date and authoritative account of clinical, mammalian, and non-mammalian problems in reproduction, including physiological, cellular, and molecular aspects. This volume opens with a chapter on autoimmunedisease in the gonads, followed by an analysis of factors regulating energy balance in human pregnancy; aspects of the female reproductive tract; genetic analysis of the human pre-implantation embryo; neuroendocrine control of reproduction; and the molecular biology of the gondadotrophic hormonereleasing hormone (GnRH). It is intended for anyone working in the fields of reproduction, fertility, and sterility, including lecturers, research scientists, clinicians, veterinarians, and students.
This volume investigates the current clinical, physiological, and molecular advancements within the field of reproductive biology as of 1995. Edited by Henry M. Charlton of the University of Oxford, this collection compiles expert analyses to address complex issues ranging from autoimmune gonadal disease to the neuroendocrine regulation of fertility. The text serves as a technical resource for researchers and clinicians seeking to synthesize diverse data points across mammalian and non-mammalian reproductive systems.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and researchers in the field of reproductive medicine regard this series as a foundational reference for mid-1990s scientific inquiry. Readers frequently note the high level of academic density and the specialized nature of the technical prose.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
1995-11-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192626299
ISBN-13:
9780192626295
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