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Heidari M, Gerami SH, Bassett B, et al. Pathological relationships involving iron and myelin may constitute a shared mechanism linking various rare and common brain diseases. Rare Dis. 2016;4(1):e1198458doi: 10.1080/21675511.2016.1198458.
Heidari, M., Gerami, S. H., Bassett, B., Graham, R. M., Chua, A. C., Aryal, R., House, M. J., Collingwood, J. F., Bettencourt, C., Houlden, H., Ryten, M., Olynyk, J. K., Trinder, D., Johnstone, D. M., & Milward, E. A. (2016). Pathological relationships involving iron and myelin may constitute a shared mechanism linking various rare and common brain diseases. Rare diseases (Austin, Tex.), 4(1), e1198458. https://doi.org/10.1080/21675511.2016.1198458
Heidari, Moones, et al. "Pathological relationships involving iron and myelin may constitute a shared mechanism linking various rare and common brain diseases." Rare diseases (Austin, Tex.) vol. 4,1 (2016): e1198458. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/21675511.2016.1198458
Heidari M, Gerami SH, Bassett B, Graham RM, Chua AC, Aryal R, House MJ, Collingwood JF, Bettencourt C, Houlden H, Ryten M, Olynyk JK, Trinder D, Johnstone DM, Milward EA. Pathological relationships involving iron and myelin may constitute a shared mechanism linking various rare and common brain diseases. Rare Dis. 2016 Jun 22;4(1):e1198458. doi: 10.1080/21675511.2016.1198458. eCollection 2016. PMID: 27500074; PMCID: PMC4961263.
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