Results 371 to 380 of about 3,051,865 (432)
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Intestinal Bypass Surgery

Archives of Dermatology, 1980
To the Editor.— The June, July, and September issues of theArchives(115:725-727, 837-839, and 1091-1093, 1979) each devote an article to the discussion of skin lesions seen in patients following intestinal bypass surgery for morbid obesity. These articles prompted us to report a similar case of the postintestinal bypass arthritis-dermatitis syndrome ...
Seymour Levine, Richard P. Kaplan
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Cardiopulmonary bypass surgery

Current Opinion in Cardiology, 1992
New information on cardiopulmonary bypass continues to be produced by investigators from many disciplines. Investigations are related to problems and complications resulting from use of the heart-lung machine. The relationship of perfusion and pressure during bypass in brain, kidney, and other organs is the subject of several reports.
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Results Of Coronary Bypass Surgery

Annual Review of Medicine, 1987
Three large randomized trials of coronary bypass surgery in patients with stable angina have been reported during the past decade. The Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS) randomized 780 patients into either a medi­ cal or a prompt surgical cohort.
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Cerebral Bypass Surgery

2020
Cerebral bypass is an important option for the management of a variety of conditions. These include flow augmentation for cerebrovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis or moyamoya and flow replacement for proximal stenosis or aneurysms. Since the integration of fluorescent technology with microscopes, fluorescent videoangiography (VA) enables real ...
Jonathan J. Russin   +3 more
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Vascular engineering for bypass surgery

Expert Review of Cardiovascular Therapy, 2005
Since the introduction of synthetic vascular grafts in the 1960s, only two-stage endothelial cell seeding has demonstrated any significant improvement over conventional vascular grafts, and its benefits have yet to be demonstrated on a large scale. Tissue engineering is a rapidly expanding field with great potential, but efforts to construct tissue ...
Daly, C.   +3 more
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Coronary bypass surgery

Postgraduate Medicine, 1978
It would be surprising indeed if the concept of improving the circulation of the heart muscle by surgical means were immediately accepted by the great majority of the medical profession. Acceptance has been won gradually because individual physicians have been able to see the good results in their patients who have undergone such a procedure and ...
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Biological Bypass in Cardiovascular Surgery

The Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon, 2004
Protein and gene therapy offer a tremendous opportunity to improve the care of critically ill patients with ischemic heart and peripheral artery occlusion disease. With the availability of purified growth factors such as vascular endothelial and fibroblast growth factors (FGF), several experimental and clinical studies provided data, that the growth of
R Quaden, Jochen Cremer, Georg Lutter
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The Psychology of Gastric Bypass Surgery

Obesity Surgery, 2001
This article discusses the importance of psychological evaluation of gastric bypass (GBP) surgery candidates and post-surgical psychological support services, using the Center for Weight Reduction Surgery at Montefiore Medical Center as a model. The study of psychological predictors of post-operative outcome is in its beginning stages, and the small ...
Elliot Goodman   +2 more
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Status of Coronary Bypass Surgery

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1975
DEBATE continues on whether aortocoronary bypass 1 is an appropriate procedure for treatment of obstructive coronary artery disease. On the one extreme, enthusiasts indicate that the coronary bypass concept already appears to be the most important contribution of the decade, because it seems not only to give prompt relief of disabling symptoms, but ...
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Indirect Bypass Surgery

2018
Moyamoya disease (MMD) is a progressive disease of the cerebrovasculature characterized by unilateral or bilateral large vessel stenosis or occlusion with associated microvascular proliferation. The incidence is highest in Asian populations, with a prevalence in Japan of 3.2–10.5 per 100,000 people [1]. The disease can be congenital with a presentation
Joshua B. Bederson   +1 more
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