The cystic artery is ligated and transected and the gallbladder is dissected from the gallbladder fossa and the right hepatic lobe. |
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After ligation of the right coronary artery, bypass grafting with a saphenous vein was performed. |
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This pulse is felt with a light pressure of the fingers, just resting on the artery. |
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What they die of is called dissection of the aorta, the artery which leaves the heart to supply blood to the rest of the body. |
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In an embryo, the aorta and the pulmonary artery are initially a single vessel. |
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When the left ventricle contracts, it sends blood into the largest artery, the aorta. |
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At this time, the surgeon begins to develop a dissection plane between the aorta and the pulmonary artery. |
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This meant that the aorta, the main artery that carries the blood away from his heart was cut. |
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Studies suggest that beta blockers may slow down the rate of aortic dilation and help prevent the artery from splitting. |
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The thoracic aorta may give rise to a renal artery, which descends through the aortic hiatus. |
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Measures are usually taken to stop the bleeding by packing the involved area tightly with gauze or suturing the artery with a running stitch. |
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A catheter is put into the pulmonary artery and a special dye is run through it that shows up under X-ray. |
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The feel of the artery itself may suggest whether its wall has normal resilience, or is hardened and thickened by arteriosclerosis. |
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The best way to get a feel of this ancient land is to course down its main artery, the Nile, which has sustained it in the past. |
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New traffic figures show Scotland's main motorway artery is rapidly clogging up ahead of expert forecasts. |
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The pathophysiology of unilateral renal artery stenosis provides a clear example of how hypertension develops. |
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These are important striate branches of the middle cerebral artery, destined for the corpus striatum, internal capsule and associated structures. |
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A long string of cars behind his vehicle testified to the jammed approaches to the major artery out of Downtown. |
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The acceleration strips the lining of the artery away faster than it can be replenished. |
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It is located just off the N5, which is the main artery between Dublin and Ballina. |
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In addition, the right coronary artery occasionally supplies a sizeable portion of left ventricular myocardium. |
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This road is the main artery between Windhoek, southern Namibia and South Africa. |
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She said this programme covers most of the Dingle Peninsula but not the N86 which is the main artery into it. |
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In this condition, muscle and fibrous tissues of the renal artery wall thicken and harden into rings. |
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By the early 1950s the Tokaido line had enhanced its position as the main artery of Japan. |
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During the Dutch colonial era this river was an important artery in the city. |
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If an artery that supplies blood to your heart becomes blocked, you can have a heart attack. |
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The drug, Paclitaxel, is meant to prevent restenosis, the narrowing of the arterial walls after a stent is inserted to unblock an artery. |
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A right bronchial artery may arise from the aorta unassociated with an intercostal artery. |
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Sometimes, after the balloon has been blown up, a device called a stent is left in the artery. |
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The internal pudendal artery may arise in common with the obturator or the umbilical. |
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The ischiadic artery was the embryonic important axial artery of the lower limb arising originally from the umbilical artery. |
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Histologically, the umbilical cord was composed of 2 vessels with a single umbilical artery. |
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Measurements of arterial blood gases were not made after 14 days of life, as the umbilical artery catheter was removed from all animals. |
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Postterm pregnancy also is an independent risk factor for low umbilical artery pH levels at delivery and low five-minute Apgar scores. |
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Before the procedure is begun, the correct depth of the umbilical artery catheter insertion should be estimated. |
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Neonatal morbidity rates were similar except for an abnormal umbilical artery pH that was more common in infants born after delayed pushing. |
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The hilum of the spleen contains the splenic vein, but the artery is out of the plane of section. |
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A couple of them are very narrow, two-lane blacktops that lead into a main artery. |
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The blood supply of the scaphoid comes from the radial artery, feeding the bone on the dorsal surface near the tubercle and scaphoid waist. |
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The posterior communicating artery is sometimes joined with the middle cerebral artery instead of the trunk of the internal carotid. |
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The main trunk of the stapedial artery atrophies and its origin from the internal carotid disappears. |
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The splenic artery was encased by tumor, although there was no intraluminal invasion, and the artery showed severe calcific atherosclerosis. |
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It can arise from the gastroepiploic artery, the splenic artery proper, the splenic branches of the splenic artery, or any combination thereof. |
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Doctors say Hindley, 57, is suffering from a cerebral aneurysm caused by an artery swelling up at the base of the brain. |
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This huge artery curves up and back from the left ventricle, then heads down in front of the spinal column into the abdomen. |
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The posterior inferior cerebellar artery may provide the posterior spinal artery. |
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At the wrist, the radial artery gives off a volar carpal branch that joins the ulnar artery. |
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Systemic venous blood goes from the right atrium, across the mitral valve, into the left ventricle and then into the pulmonary artery. |
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This artery, which supplies the trigone of the bladder, occurred in 48 of 66 bodies. |
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Ruth was referred to a vascular surgeon to assess her splenic artery aneurysm. |
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Effect of estrogen plus progestin on risk for biliary tract surgery in postmenopausal women with coronary artery disease. |
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Streets are carved out of the landscape as veins branching off a main artery, with framed vistas across the harbor. |
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The third part of the artery may be covered by the trapezius or sternocleidomastoid, or by the clavicular origin of the omohyoid. |
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A single great artery leaves the heart and gives rise to the coronary, pulmonary, and systemic arterial circulation. |
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Complete transection causes the artery to quickly retract and close down, and this promotes clotting of the blood. |
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An aneurysm is a swelling in part of an artery caused by damage to, or weakness of, a blood vessel wall. |
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The artery and nerve may be compromised if a variation of the abductor digiti minimi also occupies the canal. |
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Cases were included in the study only if a microvascular repair of artery and vein was required for the thumb to survive. |
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The common carotid artery sometimes follows a very tortuous course, forming one or more distinct loops in the neck. |
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If the abscess is located in the distal part of the tonsil, puncture of the carotid artery can occur. |
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Blood was withdrawn from the carotid artery and the sera were separated for each study. |
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Palmar metacarpal arteries and superficial palmer branches arise from the radial artery. |
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At the wrist, branches of the radial artery include the dorsal carpal and first dorsal metacarpal arteries. |
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Dietary fructose effects on lipoprotein metabolism and risk for coronary artery disease. |
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A postmortem revealed he had bled to death after a single stab wound to the neck severed a main artery. |
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Their mesentery contains ileal arteries and veins, which are also branches of the superior mesenteric artery. |
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Epidural hemorrhage presents acutely or subacutely, and usually occurs secondary to the tearing of a middle meningeal artery. |
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On the left side of this specimen, this twig arose as a branch of the vertebral artery, the inferior thyroid artery being absent. |
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This small twig arises from the thoracic aorta near the right intercostobronchial artery. |
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In the process it damaged a major vein and an artery, causing serious blood loss. |
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Small or large vessels may be affected, with local thrombosis or thromboembolism from artery to artery or cardiac embolism. |
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Often patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy also have comorbid conditions, such as coronary artery disease, hypertension, or diabetes. |
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At this point, pressure is applied to the suspect's neck between the throat and the carotid artery with the lower forearm. |
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The suprascapular artery was also found to be a very constant branch of the thyroid axis, there being only 4 exceptions, vide Group 4 variations. |
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The large basilar artery is formed at the lower border of the pons by the union of the two vertebral arteries. |
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The largest branch of the vertebral leaves before the junction of the vertebrals to form the basilar artery. |
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Approximately 20 percent of patients had internal carotid, vertebral, or basilar artery lesions, and 6 percent had multiple lesions. |
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Generally in an angioplasty, doctors thread a catheter through the femoral artery. |
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Within the device, a diaphragm is actuated pneumatically, electrically, or magnetically, and it pumps blood into the aorta or pulmonary artery. |
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Unfortunately the tumor was quite adherent to the left subclavian artery and chest wall and could not be completely removed. |
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He knew it was going to flow very steadily, since he had struck the jugular artery. |
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Anesthesia care providers must identify and locate the internal jugular veins for pulmonary artery catheter line placement. |
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This thins the blood and can help to prevent the clot that is blocking the coronary artery from spreading. |
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An anomalous carotid artery or jugular bulb may present in a similar fashion. |
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The middle suprarenal sometimes provides a spermatic artery, more frequently on the left than on the right side. |
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The femoral artery lies in front of the hip joint and descends along the medial surface of the thigh bone. |
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Pulmonary artery temperature is measured with a thermistor located at the tip of a thermodilution catheter. |
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Find your pulse by placing your index and third finger on your neck to the side of your windpipe, over your carotid artery. |
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A hole had been cut in her windpipe and the main artery in her neck had been severed almost all the way through. |
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The middle cerebral artery supplies much of the frontal, temporal, and parietal lobes of the brain. |
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The paramedian forehead flap was centered over the supratrochlear artery in a vertical orientation. |
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A special tube is inserted into the patient's leg or arm and carefully manoeuvred to the artery needing attention. |
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The surgical shunt will also be removed from her heart and a kink in the artery leading from her heart to her left lung will also be repaired. |
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In patients with good left ventricular function and no coronary artery disease, flecainide and propafenone can be used. |
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Coronary artery vasospasm is the abnormal, sudden, intense constriction of an epicardial coronary artery. |
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During coronary artery bypass graft surgery, a general surgeon is asked by the cardiac surgeon to harvest a saphenous vein. |
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The right recurrent laryngeal nerve usually passes around and behind the subclavian artery and then ascends to enter the larynx. |
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They also boost the strength of the skin's small artery walls, helping to reduce the appearance of broken veins. |
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The researchers investigated the dilatation changes in the brachial artery using high resolution magnetic resonance imaging. |
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In the meantime, she underwent biopsy of the temporal artery, and today the pathology report revealed no evidence of vasculitis. |
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Areas of blockage in the coronary artery show up on the X-ray images, so your doctor knows precisely where to target treatment. |
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A history of coronary artery bypass grafting or angioplasty was associated with macular degeneration. |
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The diversity of the material found during excavation reinforces the view that the role of this settlement was to control a major trading artery. |
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It all smacks of pennypinching, a cheap box of tricks that may be no more effective than sticking a plaster on a severed artery. |
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These plaques can rupture, releasing substances that cause blood flowing in the coronary artery to clot. |
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Existing criteria for the diagnosis of takotsubo cardiomyopathy include the absence of obstructive coronary artery disease. |
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At length by mere accident I discovered an extraordinary lusus naturae in the disposition of the right subclavian artery. |
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Many arterial branches arise from the vertebral and basilar artery to supply the medulla oblongata and the pons. |
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The left middle cerebral artery was almost completely occluded by fungal emboli. |
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After acquiring Doppler sounds at the palmar arch, the RNFA occludes the radial artery flow. |
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In ACS, the unstable plaque ruptures, thromboses, and occludes the artery, causing angina. |
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The prime focus in the treatment of an AMI in the 1980s and 1990s was on the re-establishment of flow in the acutely occluded coronary artery. |
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Margaret's left internal carotid artery was completely occluded at its origin. |
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An ascending dissection occasionally can occlude the ostium of a coronary artery and lead to myocardial infarction. |
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Reperfusion of the artery affected by infarction occasionally fails with thrombolytic treatment. |
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The pulmonary artery pressure during the initial 10 minutes of reperfusion is of prime importance. |
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The railway line is the main artery of Tawa, offering immediate access to the four main centres. |
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Sudden ruptures of the artery can lead to fatal blood loss or severe brain damage. |
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The superficial temporal occasionally gives rise to the maxillary above the zygomatic arch, or to a tympanic artery. |
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Right coronary artery procedures are often associated with sinus arrest, atrioventricular block, idioventricular rhythm, and severe hypotension. |
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He also had severe coronary artery disease with angina pectoris that could be precipitated by walking only 50 feet. |
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Bleeding occurs most often from erosion of a bronchial artery and rarely from major pulmonary vessels. |
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It then continues cranialward to bifurcate into an appropriate intercostal and a right bronchial artery. |
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The procedure offers an atraumatic conduit for the coronary artery bypass procedure and decreases the number of leg wound complications. |
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The vagus nerve may run in front of the common carotid artery instead of behind it. |
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Further cases may be detected by searching for coded coronary artery operations such as bypass surgery or angioplasty. |
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Patients with coronary artery disease undergoing angioplasty should continue taking antiplatelet drugs as usual. |
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The smaller the artery or the more constricted it was, the more vacuoles you got. |
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However, in similar coronary artery studies, antiplatelet treatment has no effect on restenosis compared with placebo. |
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Next, the doctor will pass a tiny tube called a catheter through an artery to your uterus. |
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Carotid artery stenosis is characterized by atherosclerotic changes, plaquing, ulcerations, and a progressive narrowing of the carotid vessels. |
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This is often induced by physical exertion, and the commonest aetiology is atheromatous coronary artery disease. |
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The balloon is usually introduced retrogradely via the femoral artery and passed across the aortic valve. |
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The early lesions of calcific degenerative disease resemble atheroma of the coronary artery. |
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Intracoronary brachytherapy involves treating coronary stenoses with a radioactive source from within the artery lumen. |
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Distension of the brachial artery during the cardiac cycle was measured as described previously. |
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Plaque can grow and can considerably narrow the artery, so the artery becomes constricted and the elasticity is reduced. |
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At the inguinal ligament, the external iliac artery becomes the common femoral artery. |
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He said Hindus had been looking for a temple site for more than 20 years and a spot on the town's main business and administrative artery road fitted the bill perfectly. |
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I am recovering from a quadruple coronary artery bypass operation. |
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That blade had gone through, and the X-rays revealed that the tip of the blade was on the edge of my aorta, the main artery. |
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The largest artery, the aorta arches up from the heart, carrying blood throughout the body. |
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The horn, or broken rib, had hit an artery, and within a few minutes, or seconds, he was dead. |
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Now surgeons will have an hour to fix the artery, return blood, and revive you. |
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So the most direct route from the brain to the larynx was now not south of that artery. |
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But apparently a tear in the carotid artery is the leading cause in strokes among young people. |
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Leno asked about his recent cardiovascular surgery in which doctors installed a stent to open up a clogged artery. |
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Dr. Ornish became famous in the 1990s for showing reversal of coronary artery disease using a very low-fat, near-vegetarian diet. |
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And of course he could always have coronary artery disease, even though he's a skinny guy. |
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This branch enters the skull through the superior orbital fissure or a small foramen in the greater wing of the sphenoid to anastomose with the ophthalmic artery. |
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He probably had a small kink in an artery and a clot coincided with it. |
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The recurrent laryngeal nerve runs immediately behind branches of the inferior thyroid artery so care was taken to avoid damage to this structure. |
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We help you identify your risk factors and what you can do to prevent progression of your coronary artery disease or, better yet, promote regression of the disease. |
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At age 4, a left systemic-to-pulmonary fistula was performed, using a tubular prosthesis to anastomose the left subclavian artery to the left pulmonary artery. |
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It is appropriate in the older athlete with known coronary artery disease or when symptoms suggest stable angina or exercise-induced anginal variants. |
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The extent of coronary artery disease was assessed from cineangiograms by experienced angiographers without knowledge of the serum homocysteine concentrations. |
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The severity of their coronary artery disease as assessed angiographically was strongly associated with the serum concentration of C reactive protein. |
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The majority of patients experienced further cardiac events because of restenosis and atherosclerotic coronary artery and SVG disease progression. |
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For over a quarter of a century percutaneous coronary interventions have been used to treat patients with coronary artery disease, yet restenosis continues to be a problem. |
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Successful right bronchial artery embolization was performed with coils. |
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Meantime, FEMA is deciding whether to set up shop on a neighborhood artery, Van Brunt Street, or in the IKEA parking lot. |
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A bullet had struck a femoral artery and it was gushing blood as she kept firing. |
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The stethoscope that comes with some models is used to listen to the sounds your blood makes as it flows through the brachial artery in the crook of your elbow. |
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A rod-like device, sometimes made of expandable metal mesh, is used to prop open a narrowed artery, typically as part of an angioplasty procedure. |
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Laser transmyocardial revascularization is a new tool in the armamentarium of cardiothoracic surgeons treating patients with severe coronary artery disease. |
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Thrombosis means the clotting of blood within an artery or a vein. |
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It's an absolute disgrace that the main artery of the town is closed. |
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It's madness trying to close a road which is a main artery into Bedford. |
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Cardiac catheterization and coronary arteriography are also performed when it is necessary to evaluate patients at risk for coronary artery disease prior to surgery. |
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A 74-year-old man with a history of coronary artery disease was found in asystolic arrest and was brought to the emergency department at this hospital. |
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As the lesion grows, a fibrous cap made of collagen and elastin walls off the lesion from the lumen of the artery to protect the arterial lumen from the atheroma. |
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This procedure meant cutting directly into the back of the knee, tying the damaged artery above and below the aneurysm and scraping out the blood-filled sac. |
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We recommend the thorough evaluation of possible coronary artery disease in high-risk patients, even upon the strong clinical suspicion of takotsubo cardiomyopathy. |
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The posterior tibial may be replaced by the peroneal or the saphenous artery, as these are united by an anastomosis in an early stage of development. |
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The painting is of a human heart set inside a wind-up music box that has a metal rod poking out of the pulmonary artery. |
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Clearly, the thermistor in a pulmonary artery catheter that senses the temperature of mixed venous blood provides the best measurement of core body temperature. |
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Both agents are contraindicated in patients with ischemic or vasospastic coronary artery disease, uncontrolled hypertension, and hemiplegic or basilar migraine headache. |
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The last phase of the project converted the meandering Kissimmee River, the main watershed artery to Lake Okeechobee, into a formless drainage canal. |
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Stenosis in the artery causes a swishing sound, which is heard as a bruit on auscultation and also may be felt as a thrill or slight vibration in the vessel on palpation. |
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For example, carotid endarterectomy is the surgical removal of fatty deposits clogging the carotid artery in the neck that could lead to a stroke. |
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With a low surgical risk, carotid endarterectomy provides modest benefit in symptomatic patients with carotid artery stenosis of 50 to 69 percent. |
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Obviously, an artery carries more blood than does a vein or capillary. |
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The muscle is detached from its insertion at the greater tubercle of the humerus, leaving its blood supply to the thoracoacromial artery and internal mammary artery. |
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Fusion of dorsal mesogastrium to the posterior abdominal wall and left kidney forms the lienorenal ligament containing tail of pancreas and splenic artery. |
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Atheroma is a discrete plaque containing lipid deposits that arises in the intima of an artery and has a predilection for areas of tortuosity and turbulence of blood flow. |
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The tortuous course of the splenic artery is considered so variable that no two arteries are alike, but the tortuosity of the artery is absent in infants and children. |
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A focal stenosis on a straight artery without proximal vessel tortuousness or involvement of major side branches is ideal for percutaneous intervention. |
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The veins were connected by microsurgery to the coronary arteries beyond the narrowed areas and then linked to the high-pressure artery, the aorta, just above the heart. |
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Untreated, the disease leads to serious microvascular consequences that include blindness, renal failure, coronary artery disease, and limb amputations. |
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The artery should be easily palpable or visible with transillumination. |
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When this foramen is absent, the artery enters the foramen ovale, which is typically the foramen for the mandibular division of the trigeminal nerve. |
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A lateral internal thoracic artery may arise from the thyrocervical trunk. |
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But these young women all suffered a rare kind of stroke caused by a vertebral artery dissection, or vad. |
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The last resort would be to open you up again and tie off the cystic artery, which will kill the gallbladder but put you at risk for death from blood poisoning. |
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Apgar scores and umbilical artery pH did not differ between groups. |
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It is interesting to note that cord abnormalities such as true knots, nuchal cord, insertional abnormalities, tumors, and single umbilical artery were not seen in our study. |
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The device we are developing will allow the neonatologist to monitor blood in a noninvasive manner beyond the period of umbilical artery recording. |
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The required sedation to insert the umbilical artery and percutaneous central venous catheters resulted in the infants having a poor respiratory drive initially. |
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A single umbilical artery is present in 0.2 to 1 percent of newborns and may be associated with asymptomatic renal anomalies in 7 percent of these infants. |
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Also a fleshy slip may also arise from the medial border of biceps and pass to the medial intermuscular septum or medial epicondyle over the brachial artery. |
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When the spleen is absent, the splenic artery terminates in the pancreas. |
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It may be joined by a vas aberrans from the brachial or axillary artery. |
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Because of its vasoconstrictive properties, sumatriptan should be avoided in patients with known coronary artery disease or Prinzmetal's variant angina. |
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He underwent laparotomy with splenectomy and splenic artery resection. |
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After the subject had remained seated for 10 minutes, blood pressure was measured at the brachial artery by the auscultatory method. |
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In the first instance, a GTN patch was applied to the radial artery just below the thenar eminence. |
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Pulmonary artery aneurysm and polycythaemia with respiratory hypersensitivity in a blue and gold macaw. |
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The AVAIL multicenter clinical study enrolled coronary artery disease patients who had a high risk of restenosis following balloon angioplasty. |
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Promoter polymorphism of interleukin-18 in angiographically proven coronary artery disease. |
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During a coronary angiogram, a catheter is often inserted into the right arm through the radial artery and then guided towards the heart. |
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And she has subpulmonary stenosis, a narrowing of the pulmonary artery, which pumps blood to the lungs. |
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Digital substraction angiography confirmed a mural type of VGAM supplied by the left posterior medial choroidal artery. |
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The Elastin Heterograft 1 conduit was produced by extracting a 3-5 cm length of intact porcine carotid artery. |
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Contrast-enhanced CT of the thorax revealed an aneurysmatic enlargement of the left subclavian artery. |
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The contributing branches of the left external carotid artery were successfully embolized with polyvinyl alcohol. |
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The ileocolic artery is the lowest branch arising from the concavity of the superior mesenteric artery. |
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The suprascapular nerve innervates the supraspinatus muscle, and the suprascapular artery is the blood supply. |
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Then, the distances from the carotid sampling site to the suprasternal notch and from the suprasternal notch to the femoral artery were measured. |
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Alanna Casement ripped an artery when she landed on top of the bike and the handlebar gouged into her leg. |
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The stapedial artery then passes rostrolateral to the paroccipital process and ventral to the dorsotemporal process of the parietal bone. |
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The carotid body is a chemoreceptor located in the adventitia posteromedially to the bifurcation of the common carotid artery. |
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Hemostasis should be achieved because the acromial branch of the thoracoacromial artery travels in proximity to the CA ligament. |
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These findings were compatible with acute ischemia due to occlusion of the artery of Percheron. |
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Carotid Doppler ultrasonography showed complete occlusion of the right common carotid artery and internal carotid artery. |
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Both MRA and DSA appeared to demonstrate occlusion of the basilar artery, as well as occlusion of the bilateral distal vertebral arteries. |
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In patients with atherosclerotic renal artery stenoses and hypertension, clinical outcomes were not improved by the use of stents. |
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In his 20-page determination, Sheriff Richard Scott ruled the cause of death was coronary artery atheroma which could have occurred at any time. |
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The IMT measurements on each side were taken at the common carotid artery and the internal carotid artery 10 mm after the flow divider. |
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At a certain point, this artery suddenly allows side-of-the-road parking. |
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The coeliac plexus is formed by the two interconnecting coeliac ganglia which lie either side of the coeliac artery. |
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An oblique view of the operative field may predispose the surgeon to skive unilaterally toward a vertebral artery. |
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Vasospastic action of serotonin on the umbilical artery in normal and preeclamptic patients. |
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Vasospastic episodes can occur in patients who have artery blockage disease and in those who do not. |
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Until the arrival of the railways, the Thames was the principal artery connecting Woolwich to London. |
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There is collateral circulation from the deferential artery and the cremasteric artery. |
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The appearance of an aberrant internal carotid artery on high-resolution computed tomography is characteristic. |
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Twenty microliter blood was drawn from the postorbital artery in the 2nd and 10th min after injection, respectively. |
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Benign Raeder's syndrome is probably a manifestation of carotid artery disease. |
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It was this vital spirit which was mainly responsible for creating the pulsative power within the coats of the artery. |
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The Lisbon Metro is its main artery, connecting the city centre with the upper and eastern districts and now reaching the suburbs. |
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There was normal peak systolic velocity with severely decreased diastolic flow both pre and postprandially in the superior mesenteric artery. |
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Saccular renal artery aneurysm treated with an autologous vein-covered stent. |
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Usually donor kidney is placed in the right iliac fossa with anastamosis to right internal or external iliac artery and external iliac vein. |
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The interatrial artery of the ostrich is small in size and exclusively supplies blood to only part of the left auricle and interatrial septum. |
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Benign causes of Garcin's syndrome include pachymeningitis secondary to otitis media and a large internal carotid artery aneurysm. |
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Late angiographic result of using the right gastroepiploic artery as a graft. |
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Nothing vital has been damaged, but a major artery was nicked. |
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The 3rd century saw the Danube river become the principal artery of trade, eclipsing the Amber Road and other commercial routes. |
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Preoperative shift from glibenclamide to insulin is cardioprotective in diabetic patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. |
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If the septal branch of the sphenopalatine artery is encountered, it can be cauterized by bipolar diathermy. |
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Arch arteriography was performed percutaneously via the right common femoral artery to evaluate the anatomy. |
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Remnants of the sciatic artery persist as parts of the internal iliac artery and portions of the popliteal and peroneal arteries. |
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There is no direct connection between the internal carotid artery and the vessels of the brain. |
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Carotid artery distensibility and function in adolescents with type 1 diabetes. |
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Uterine artery embolisation avoids major surgery and reduces the time spent in hospital and recovering. |
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The common carotid artery originates from the brachiocephalic artery at right and the aortic arch at left. |
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The Claret CE Pro system has two filters to capture any debris that moves in the brachiocephalic and left common carotid artery. |
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Brachial artery pressure index was also significantly improved in both the folic acid and 5-MTHF groups. |
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The route forms a key artery on the eastern side of Great Britain and is broadly paralleled by the A1 trunk road. |
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This defect may be found anywhere from just above the semilunar valves to the more distal ascending aorta and main pulmonary artery. |
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A fragment penetrated her shoulder, missing a major artery by an inch. |
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Treatments include myomectomy and hysterectomy, and a minimally invasive nonsurgical procedure, uterine artery embolization. |
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Within the hematoma, a small region of arterial extravasation from injury to the left internal mammary artery was identified. |
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However, blood group AB has been linked to inflammation, which plays an important role in artery damage. |
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Some studies connect consuming sesame oil with reducing high blood pressure and artery plaque. |
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They preyed voraciously on China's junk trade, which flourished in Fujian and Guangdong and was a vital artery of Chinese commerce. |
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The Kips Bay Medical eSVS Mesh is designed to address the limitations of saphenous vein grafts used in coronary artery bypass graft surgery. |
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The following discussion considers exposure of the artery in the midleg, distal leg, and foot. |
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Spontaneous retroperitoneal haematoma from rupturing of an aneurysm of the ovarian artery following delivery. |
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It caused severe internal bleeding which Mr Tripuraneni tried to stem by ligating, or tying, the artery closed, the court heard. |
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The bullet had missed his main artery by the barest margin and his voice was barely audible. |
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Selective uterine artery embolization as primary treatment for symptomatic leiomyomata uteri. |
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Sinuatrial nodal artery arose from the RCA in 70 per cent and from the circumflex artery in 30 per cent of instances. |
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In either case, the artery suffers restenosis, or narrowing to the point where healthy blood flow is again impaired. |
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Within six seconds of looping around an anesthetized lab rat, a boa constrictor squeezes enough to halve blood pressure in a rear-leg artery. |
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This is an important artery and the corridor is where most of Shropshire's modern commerce and industry is found, notably in Telford new town. |
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The first part involves insonation of the vessel at the sub-occipital level where the artery runs along the atlantal transverse process. |
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The feeding artery will demonstrate a high-velocity, low-resistance waveform and the draining vein may show pulsatile, arterialized flow. |
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Systemic lupus erythematosus is an uncommon cause of coronary artery aneurysms, with Kawasaki disease being a much more common cause in children. |
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Its blood supply derives from the anterior humeral circumflex artery while it receives musculocutaneous innervation. |
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A 41-year-old white man was referred for evaluation of a splenic artery aneurysm and an acquired splenorenal venous shunt. |
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Effects of carbon monoxide inhalation on myocardial infarct size following experimental coronary artery ligation. |
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Cholangiographic findings in hepatic artery occlusion after liver transplantation. |
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Comparison of outcomes with coils versus vascular plug embolization of the internal iliac artery for endovascular aortoiliac aneurysm repair. |
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A stent is passed into the aorta from the artery at the top of the leg in a delicate operation done under direct vision on a screen. |
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There I was struck on the shoulder by a Jezail bullet, which shattered the bone and grazed the subclavian artery. |
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Rogers noted that use of radial artery pulse waveforms has been validated in nonpregnant populations but not in pregnancy. |
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Potentially posterior cerebral artery occlusion resulting in a homonymous hemianopia. |
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If your radial artery closes down for some reason there can be a risk of amputation. |
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Prior to accessing the radial artery, Allen's test can be helpful for evaluating patency of ulnar artery circulation. |
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Palpate one inch below the antecubital fossa to locate the brachial artery pulse found on the inside of the forearm. |
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The superficial temporal artery may become exquisitely tender to the touch and visibly indurated. |
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Suri and Suri had studied the effects of static transverse magnetic field on the stenosed bifurcated model of artery. |
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In the colon, solid bowel contents lead to stercoral ulceration with resultant exposure of the abnormal artery and hemorrhage. |
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As expected, the trigeminal artery runs along the trigeminal nerve connecting the cavernous carotid artery to the basilar system. |
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It requires severely angulating the uterus to expose the uterine artery and vein, allowing a more direct approach from the umbilicus. |
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An attempt to reimplant the vertebral artery to the polytetrafluoroethylene graft was also unsuccessful, as the artery was very inflamed and friable. |
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The branch that originated off of the RAA was spatulated and sewn over the defect in the main renal artery and the other branch to reconstruct the bifurcation. |
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Right and left ventricular collagen content was increased with pulmonary artery banding compared to sham-operated controls and ameliorated by macitentan. |
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