Results 331 to 340 of about 333,706 (363)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Virchows Archiv A Pathological Anatomy and Histopathology, 1987
Autopsy of a twenty year old girl dying from complications of renal and cardiac failure demonstrated severe hepatocellular calcification, a rare finding. The pathogenesis is thought to be a combination of dystrophic calcification caused by severe centrilobular necrosis and metastatic calcification due to secondary hyperparathyroidism.
Ladefoged, Claus, Frifelt, J J
openaire +2 more sources
Autopsy of a twenty year old girl dying from complications of renal and cardiac failure demonstrated severe hepatocellular calcification, a rare finding. The pathogenesis is thought to be a combination of dystrophic calcification caused by severe centrilobular necrosis and metastatic calcification due to secondary hyperparathyroidism.
Ladefoged, Claus, Frifelt, J J
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of the Faculty of Radiologists, 1954
Summary Calcifications in the hands of 3 patients with loiasis are recorded and are compatible with calcification of dead adult worms. This finding would appear to be more common than the literature suggests, but at the moment has little practical significance. A second type of calcification is seen which has a less certain explanation.
openaire +3 more sources
Summary Calcifications in the hands of 3 patients with loiasis are recorded and are compatible with calcification of dead adult worms. This finding would appear to be more common than the literature suggests, but at the moment has little practical significance. A second type of calcification is seen which has a less certain explanation.
openaire +3 more sources
Calcification in atherosclerosis
Nature Reviews Cardiology, 2009Coronary calcification has long been known to occur as a part of the atherosclerotic process, although whether it is a marker of plaque stability or instability is still a topic of considerable debate. Coronary calcification is an active process resembling bone formation within the vessel wall and, with the advances in CT technology of the past decade,
Nikolaos Alexopoulos, Paolo Raggi
openaire +2 more sources
Tubercle, 1961
Summary In a series of 136 patients with sarcoidosis, kept under observation for 5 years or longer, evidence of developing calcification was sought in serial postero-anterior radiographs of the chest. It was found in hilar lymph-nodes, in the lungs or in both these sites, undoubtedly in 7 and probably in 11 more.
openaire +3 more sources
Summary In a series of 136 patients with sarcoidosis, kept under observation for 5 years or longer, evidence of developing calcification was sought in serial postero-anterior radiographs of the chest. It was found in hilar lymph-nodes, in the lungs or in both these sites, undoubtedly in 7 and probably in 11 more.
openaire +3 more sources
Radiologic Clinics of North America, 2004
Cardiac calcification usually represents the result of a pathologic process. Some forms of calcification represent chronic change in an ageing population, and must be differentiated from pathologic calcification. Still other forms of calcification are associated with ageing and chronic degeneration, but also reflect ongoing pathologic processes ...
Ramesh M. Gowda+2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Cardiac calcification usually represents the result of a pathologic process. Some forms of calcification represent chronic change in an ageing population, and must be differentiated from pathologic calcification. Still other forms of calcification are associated with ageing and chronic degeneration, but also reflect ongoing pathologic processes ...
Ramesh M. Gowda+2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Calcification of the Epiglottis
The British Journal of Radiology, 1965The epiglottis and the cartilages of Wrisberg are stated to be made of yellow elastic fibro cartilage and not to calcify as the majority of other laryngeal cartilages do. Negus (1949) states that the epiglottis in man does not calcify. He is quoted by Pressman and Kelleman (1955) who state in their physiological review that the epiglottis has never ...
openaire +3 more sources
International Journal of Cardiology, 1997
When the heart contracts, it compresses its own arteries, so that it cannot supply itself with blood during systole. Its perfusion is effected during diastole by an auxiliary pump, which is an elastic reservoir consisting of the aorta and its large branch arteries.
openaire +3 more sources
When the heart contracts, it compresses its own arteries, so that it cannot supply itself with blood during systole. Its perfusion is effected during diastole by an auxiliary pump, which is an elastic reservoir consisting of the aorta and its large branch arteries.
openaire +3 more sources
CALCIFICATION OF THE MYOCARDIUM
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1947Excerpt In 1924 Scholz1assembled from the literature 30 cases of calcification of the myocardium. He classified 14 as due to myocarditis.
openaire +3 more sources