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Endobronchial Ablative Therapies

Clinics in Chest Medicine, 2013
Endobronchial ablative therapies are used to address a variety of malignant and benign airway lesions. By utilizing endobronchial ablative techniques patients with symptomatic airway lesions may receive significant symptom improvement, improved quality of life, and improved life expectancy. Endobronchial ablative therapies include laser, electrocautery,
Joseph C, Seaman, Ali I, Musani
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Ablative Light Sources

Applied Optics, 1968
Electrical and optical properties of ablative light sources are discussed. For the range of parameters studied, the energy balance shows that it is possible to obtain approximately one-third of the energy delivered to the lamp as radiative energy (in the 0.35-1.1-micro band); two-thirds are used in the buildup processes of the discharge.
R G, Buser, W P, Rahilly
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Malignant transformation by abl and BCR/ABL

1993
Activated abl oncogenes have been implicated in causing pre-B lymphoma in mice via Abelson murine leukemia virus, fibrosarcoma in cats via Hardy-Zuckerman feline sarcoma virus II, and, through the Philadelphia chromosome, are linked with the myeloproliferative syndrome chronic myelogenous leukemia and with acute lymphoid and myeloid leukemia in humans.
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Ablative Skin Resurfacing

Facial Plastic Surgery, 2014
Ablative laser resurfacing has evolved as a safe and effective treatment for skin rejuvenation. Although traditional lasers were associated with significant thermal damage and lengthy recovery, advances in laser technology have improved safety profiles and reduced social downtime.
Nidhi, Agrawal   +2 more
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Non-Ablative Lasers

2011
Non-ablative laser devices exert their effects by inducing dermal collagen remodeling while sparing the epidermis. The remodeling process is achieved by producing thermal energy in a controlled and precise fashion, which recruits fibroblasts and stimulates collagen production.
David H, Ciocon   +2 more
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Inhibitors of ABL and the ABL-T315I Mutation

Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry, 2008
Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is a hematological stem cell disorder caused by increased and unregulated growth of myeloid cells in the bone marrow, and the accumulation of excessive white blood cells. Abelson tyrosine kinase (ABL) is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase involved in cell growth and proliferation and is usually under tight control ...
Glenn, Noronha   +15 more
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Ablative and Non-ablative Fractional Resurfacing

2012
Fractionated laser resurfacing leads to improvement of photodamaged skin, rhytides and acne scars. In contrast to non-fractionated ablative laser resurfacing, fractionated ablative laser resurfacing is associated with lower risk of complications and less downtime.
David H. Ciocon   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Ablative Skin Resurfacing

2011
Ablative skin resurfacing has remained the gold standard for treating photodamage and acne scars since the development of the first CO(2) lasers. CO(2) and Er:YAG lasers emit infrared light, which targets water resulting in tissue contraction and collagen formation.
Jennifer, Chwalek, David J, Goldberg
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Endobronchial Ablative Therapies

Clinics in Chest Medicine, 2018
Endobronchial ablative therapies, such as mechanical debulking, laser therapy, electrocautery, argon plasma coagulation, cryotherapy, brachytherapy, photodynamic therapy, microdebrider bronchoscopy, resector balloon deobstruction, and intratumoral chemotherapy, are performed through a rigid or flexible bronchoscope in palliating or curing symptomatic ...
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Skin Resurfacing: Ablative and Non-ablative Lasers

2020
The request for skin rejuvenating techniques is increasing. The concept of nonsurgical skin rejuvenation has been developed through the introduction of laser skin resurfacing. Laser resurfacing for skin rejuvenation was first introduced in the 1980s through the ablative carbon dioxide (CO2) laser.
Pier Luca Bencini, Stefania Guida
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