1951
DOI: 10.1093/ajcp/21.6.508
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Chylomicrons of Blood: A Resumé of Literature and a Recommended Counting Procedure

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1952
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Cited by 8 publications
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“…In 1946, Chargaff and West [6] isolated the coagulation components of the platelet-free plasma by high-speed centrifugation (31,000× g), but it was not clear whether these structures were the same as Haemokonien. Other names describing blood serum particles such as protein particles, fat particles, fat dust, disintegrated platelets, chylomicrons, or white blood cells were also introduced [7]. In 1967, Wolf introduced the term "platelet-dust" to distinguish the platelet-secreted coagulant-material-carrying particles from chylomicrons.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 1946, Chargaff and West [6] isolated the coagulation components of the platelet-free plasma by high-speed centrifugation (31,000× g), but it was not clear whether these structures were the same as Haemokonien. Other names describing blood serum particles such as protein particles, fat particles, fat dust, disintegrated platelets, chylomicrons, or white blood cells were also introduced [7]. In 1967, Wolf introduced the term "platelet-dust" to distinguish the platelet-secreted coagulant-material-carrying particles from chylomicrons.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 1946, Chargaff and West [5] isolated the coagulation components of the platelet-free plasma by high-speed centrifugation (31,000×g), but it wasn't clear whether these structures were the same as Haemokonien. Other names describing blood serum particles such as protein particles, fat particles, fat dust, disintegrated platelets, chylomicrons, or white blood cells were also introduced [6]. In 1967, Wolf introduced the term "platelet-dust" to distinguish the platelet-secreted coagulant-material-carrying particles from chylomicrons.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%