Kupffer"s cells - translation to arabic
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Kupffer"s cells - translation to arabic

MACROPHAGES LOCATED IN THE LIVER
Kupffer cells; Browicz-Kupffer cell; Kuppfer cell; Kupffer Cells; Star cell; Kuppfer cells; Browicz-Kupffer cells; Stellate macrophage; Stellate macrophages; Kupfer cell; Macrophages of the liver

Kupffer's cells      
‎ خَلاَيا كُوبْفَر:في الكبد‎
ESS         
  • Proto-Sinaitic Shin
  • Late medieval German script (Swabian [[bastarda]], dated 1496) illustrating the use of long and round ''s'': ''prieſters tochter'' ("priest's daughter").
  • Proto-Sinaitic Shin
  • A letter S in the coat of arms of [[Sortavala]]
19TH LETTER IN THE ENGLISH ALPHABET
Ess; S; User:Soroush.Setodeh; S (letter); ASCII 83; ASCII 115; U+0053; U+0073; Letter S

ألاسم

ِحقة معناها أنثى

S         
  • Proto-Sinaitic Shin
  • Late medieval German script (Swabian [[bastarda]], dated 1496) illustrating the use of long and round ''s'': ''prieſters tochter'' ("priest's daughter").
  • Proto-Sinaitic Shin
  • A letter S in the coat of arms of [[Sortavala]]
19TH LETTER IN THE ENGLISH ALPHABET
Ess; S; User:Soroush.Setodeh; S (letter); ASCII 83; ASCII 115; U+0053; U+0073; Letter S
sulfur
رمز الكبريت , كب؛S , سيغما , سيجما , سيغما


second
رمز ثا , ثانية , رمز الاِنْحِرَافُ المِعْيَارِيّ ( الإحصاء)

Definition

Kupffer cell
['k?pf?]
¦ noun Anatomy a phagocytic liver cell, involved in the breakdown of red blood cells.
Origin
early 20th cent.: named after the Bavarian anatomist Karl Wilhelm von Kupffer.

Wikipedia

Kupffer cell

Kupffer cells, also known as stellate macrophages and Kupffer–Browicz cells, are specialized cells localized in the liver within the lumen of the liver sinusoids and are adhesive to their endothelial cells which make up the blood vessel walls. Kupffer cells comprise the largest population of tissue-resident macrophages in the body. Gut bacteria, bacterial endotoxins, and microbial debris transported to the liver from the gastrointestinal tract via the portal vein will first come in contact with Kupffer cells, the first immune cells in the liver. It is because of this that any change to Kupffer cell functions can be connected to various liver diseases such as alcoholic liver disease, viral hepatitis, intrahepatic cholestasis, steatohepatitis, activation or rejection of the liver during liver transplantation and liver fibrosis. They form part of the mononuclear phagocyte system.