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Postoperative Bleeding: Coagulopathy, Bleeding, Hemothorax

Thoracic Surgery Clinics, 2006
Several issues are involved in determining a patient's risk for postoperative hemorrhage and in managing this potential postoperative complication. The impact of minimally invasive procedures on the incidence of this complication is addressed in this article.
Virginia R, Litle, Scott J, Swanson
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Gastrointestinal bleeding

Endoscopy, 2009
Journal Article ; info:eu-repo/semantics ...
Eisendrath, Pierre, Le Moine, Olivier
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Postmenopausal Bleeding

Clinics in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1974
ABSTRACT: During a two‐year period, 363 women with postmenopausal bleeding were studied. Included were women in whom the menses had been absent for one or more years and women treated with exogenous estrogens for at least one year.
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Gastrointestinal bleeding

Endoscopy, 2001
Gastrointestinal bleeding remains one of the most important emergencies in gastroenterology. Despite this, only about 100 abstracts concerning gastrointestinal bleeding (excluding bleeding complicating endoscopic procedures) were presented at this year's Digestive Disease Week (DDW; 7-10 May 2011; Chicago, Illinois, USA), accounting for less than 2% of
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Gastrointestinal Bleeding

Gastroenterology Clinics of North America, 2005
Gastrointestinal bleeding encompasses a broad array of clinical scenarios. The spectrum is diverse because of the multiple types of lesions that can cause bleeding, and because bleeding can occur from virtually anywhere in the gastrointestinal tract. The fundamental tenets of management of patients with gastrointestinal bleeding include the following: (
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Abnormal Bleeding

Anesthesiology, 1983
Dysfunctional uterine bleeding (DUB) is a common cause of abnormal uterine bleeding and its diagnosis depends upon excluding organic lesions of the reproductive tract. The workup of the patient requires a complete medical history, physical examination, studies for ovulation, and genital tissue sampling. Whereas DUB is a physiologic normal phenomenon in
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