Results 311 to 320 of about 1,154,939 (343)
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The American Journal of Surgery, 1957
Abstract Arteriosclerotic arterial insufficiency of the peripheral blood vessels is often due to localized obstruction with a patent arterial system above and below the obstruction. The results of twenty-three bypass grafts in fifteen patients are reported.
J.Howard Payne +2 more
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Abstract Arteriosclerotic arterial insufficiency of the peripheral blood vessels is often due to localized obstruction with a patent arterial system above and below the obstruction. The results of twenty-three bypass grafts in fifteen patients are reported.
J.Howard Payne +2 more
openaire +1 more source
2011
The thoracic part of the right subclavian artery originates from the brachiocephalic trunk, just behind the sternoclavicular joint, and passes upward in the scalenotracheal fossa to the medial margin of the scalenus anterior.
Denis Berdajs, Marko I. Turina
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The thoracic part of the right subclavian artery originates from the brachiocephalic trunk, just behind the sternoclavicular joint, and passes upward in the scalenotracheal fossa to the medial margin of the scalenus anterior.
Denis Berdajs, Marko I. Turina
openaire +1 more source
Redo coronary artery bypass grafting
General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 2014Redo coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is more challenging than primary CABG in many aspects. Patients who undergo redo CABG are older, more comorbid, and with more sclerotic coronary and noncardiac arteries than seen in primary CABG. Operative procedures are more complicated, reentry of the sternum is sometimes problematic, and dissection of the ...
Hitoshi, Yaku, Kiyoshi, Doi
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2008
CT was used early on for non-invasive imaging of coronary artery bypass grafts (CABGs) in order to determine patency or occlusion because CABGs are generally larger and less mobile than native coronary arteries making them more forgiving imaging targets.1 CABG patency could be determined with > 90% sensitivity and specificity using contrast enhanced ...
Pal Suranyi +3 more
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CT was used early on for non-invasive imaging of coronary artery bypass grafts (CABGs) in order to determine patency or occlusion because CABGs are generally larger and less mobile than native coronary arteries making them more forgiving imaging targets.1 CABG patency could be determined with > 90% sensitivity and specificity using contrast enhanced ...
Pal Suranyi +3 more
openaire +1 more source
Coronary Arterial Bypass Grafts
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1968G E, Green, S H, Stertzer, E H, Reppert
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