Results 311 to 320 of about 1,335,017 (353)
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Platelets and Blood Vessels

Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1984
The intravascular adhesion and aggregation of platelets initiate hemostasis and arterial thrombosis. In vitro, platelet aggregation is induced by many different agents; which of these is responsible for aggregation in vivo is now under investigation.
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Blood vessels and Parkinsonism

Frontiers in Bioscience, 2004
Blood vessels are the way for nutrients present outside the brain to gain access into the cerebral parenchyma. When neurons are diseased, for example by toxin exposure, reactive glial cells secrete local factors that induce microangiogenesis, probably as part of a spontaneous neuroprotective mechanism related to the increased metabolic demand.
Carlos, Barcia   +3 more
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Potassium and blood vessels

Life Sciences, 1975
Abstract Intraarterial infusion of potassium causes vasodilation whereas reduction of the potassium concentration in the inflowing blood causes vasoconstriction. These responses have always been puzzling since the predicted effects from the Nernst equation are just the reverse. Recent evidence suggests that they result form effects on the activity of
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Blood vessels, circulation and blood pressure

Nursing Standard, 2012
This article, which forms part of the life sciences series, describes the vessels of the body's blood and lymphatic circulatory systems. Blood pressure and its regulatory systems are examined. The causes and management of hypertension are also explored.
Charles, Hendry   +2 more
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BPC 157 and Blood Vessels

Current Pharmaceutical Design, 2014
This review focuses on the described effects of BPC 157 on blood vessels after different types of damage, and elucidate by investigating different aspects of vascular response to injury (endothelium damage, clotting, thrombosis, vasoconstriction, vasodilatation, vasculoneogenesis and edema formation) especially in connection to the healing processes ...
Seiwerth, Sven   +9 more
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Flexor Tendon Blood Vessels

Journal of Hand Surgery, 2000
The aim of this study was to assess rabbit long flexor tendon vascularity in a qualitative and quantitative manner using immunohistochemistry. The endothelial cell surface marker CD31 was targeted with a specific monoclonal mouse-anti-human antibody with good species cross-reactivity.
Jones, M. E.   +5 more
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EXPOSURE OF BLOOD VESSELS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1946
Increasing emphasis placed on physiology and on biochemical methods in the training of surgeons has reduced the study of anatomy to a relatively unimportant position. No one can deny or deprecate the contributions other sciences have made to surgery, but the neglect of training in anatomy, both in graduate and undergraduate teaching, has been a ...
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The Blood Vessels of Retinoblastomas

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1961
Retinoblastomas are rapidly growing malignant tumors of the retina. They arise from the nuclear layers of the retina and are, therefore, neuroectodermal in character. The characteristic growth pattern of the retinoblastomas is that the neuroectodermal tumor cells arrange themselves in lobules around many newly formed vascular channels. These arise from
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Blood Vessels and Lymphatic Vessels

2019
Development of the vascular and lymphatic trees is essential for the formation of nearly every organ during embryonic and fetal life. In the fetus, there are some unique features of the vascular tree that facilitate the fetoplacental circulation in utero, such as the umbilical vein, umbilical arteries, ductus venosus, and ductus arteriosus.
Linda M. Ernst, Michael K. Fritsch
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Laser Effects on Blood, Blood Vessels and Blood Vessel Tumors

1967
Impacts of the laser on living tissue show significant effects on blood vessels with either hemorrhage or thrombosis (clotting), or both. It was assumed that the red color absorbed the laser radiation. Our studies on fresh blood smears showed destruction of red cells even with low energy densities.
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