1986
Primary central nervous system lymphoma related to Epstein‐Barr virus in a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome
Rosenberg N, Hochberg F, Miller G, Kleinschmidt‐DeMasters B. Primary central nervous system lymphoma related to Epstein‐Barr virus in a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Annals Of Neurology 1986, 20: 98-102. PMID: 3017188, DOI: 10.1002/ana.410200118.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAcquired Immunodeficiency SyndromeBrain NeoplasmsDNA, ViralHerpesvirus 4, HumanHumansLymphoma, Non-HodgkinMaleMiddle AgedOccipital LobeTumor Virus InfectionsConceptsCentral nervous system lymphomaEpstein-Barr virus infectionNervous system lymphomaImmune deficiency syndromeSystem lymphomaDeficiency syndromeVirus infectionPrimary central nervous system lymphomaEpstein-Barr virus genomeEpstein-Barr virusCentral nervous systemPrimary lymphomaNervous systemTumor tissueLymphomaPatientsSyndromeInfectionAcid preparationsHybridization studiesDeoxyribonucleic acid preparationsVirus genomeK fragment
1984
Regions of the EBV genome involved in latency and lymphocyte immortalization.
Miller G. Regions of the EBV genome involved in latency and lymphocyte immortalization. Medical Virology 1984, 30: 107-28. PMID: 6087408.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAnimalsAntigens, ViralB-LymphocytesCell NucleusCell Transformation, ViralChildChild, PreschoolChromosome DeletionDNA, ViralEpstein-Barr Virus Nuclear AntigensFemaleGenes, ViralHerpesvirus 4, HumanHumansLymphomaMaleRepetitive Sequences, Nucleic AcidRNA, ViralTranscription, GeneticTumor Virus InfectionsVirionVirus Replication