Results 261 to 270 of about 112,645 (295)
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Concomitant Acute Sinusitis and Acute Lung Rejection
Southern Medical Journal, 2000Two lung transplant recipients had concomitant acute sinusitis and acute lung rejection. Antibiotics and decongestants alleviated the sinusitis, but the symptoms of cough and dyspnea as well as spirometric defects necessitated treatment of acute lung rejection.
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Acute Rejection, type I (Interstitial)
American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 2000y Dis. 2000;35(4):E13-E14 Fig 1. Tubulitis, ie, infiltration of tubular epithelium by lymphocytes, is the hallmark of type I interstitial acute rejection. Different classifications have been put forth for diagnosis of acute rejection. Among the most widely used are Banff, most recently revised in 1997 (published in Kidney International 1999), and CCTT (
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Acute rejection post lung transplant
Current Opinion in Pulmonary MedicinePurpose of Review To review what is currently known about the pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of acute rejection (AR) in lung transplantation. Recent Findings Epigenomic and transcriptomic methods are gaining traction as tools for earlier detection of AR, which ...
Justin, Hanks +2 more
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Acute Rejection and Antibody-Mediated Rejection in Lung Transplantation
Clinics in Chest Medicine, 2017Despite advances in immunosuppression over the past 25 years, acute cellular rejection remains a common complication early after lung transplantation. Although acute cellular rejection has often not resulted in clinical signs or symptoms of allograft dysfunction, it has been widely recognized as a strong independent risk factor for the development of ...
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1984
Experimental cardiac transplantation using various animals preceded the first human-to-human cardiac transplant in 1967. Such experimental work provided a sound basis for our understanding of the clinical and pathological features of cardiac rejection and their modification by immunosuppressive agents.
A. G. Rose, C. J. Uys
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Experimental cardiac transplantation using various animals preceded the first human-to-human cardiac transplant in 1967. Such experimental work provided a sound basis for our understanding of the clinical and pathological features of cardiac rejection and their modification by immunosuppressive agents.
A. G. Rose, C. J. Uys
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