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Distinct actomyosin-septin coordination governs conidiation and septation in <i>Verticillium dahliae</i>. [PDF]
Tian J +7 more
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Quantitative pupillometry as a sensitive tool for detecting tumor-related mass effect in the posterior fossa: a prospective feasibility study comparing metastatic versus skull base lesions. [PDF]
Grutza M +5 more
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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1976
A patient with constrictive pericarditis following an open-heart operation without sepsis is discussed. In the absence of sepsis, it has been widely held that this complication does not develop following an open-heart procedure. The fatal outcome in this patient could have been avoided had such an association been known.
J S, Simon, J R, Pluth
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A patient with constrictive pericarditis following an open-heart operation without sepsis is discussed. In the absence of sepsis, it has been widely held that this complication does not develop following an open-heart procedure. The fatal outcome in this patient could have been avoided had such an association been known.
J S, Simon, J R, Pluth
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Cardiology Clinics, 2017
Constrictive pericarditis is a potentially treatable cause of diastolic heart failure that arises because a diseased, inelastic pericardium restricts ventricular diastolic expansion. Affected patients present with heart failure with predominant right-sided symptoms and signs.
Terrence D, Welch, Jae K, Oh
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Constrictive pericarditis is a potentially treatable cause of diastolic heart failure that arises because a diseased, inelastic pericardium restricts ventricular diastolic expansion. Affected patients present with heart failure with predominant right-sided symptoms and signs.
Terrence D, Welch, Jae K, Oh
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The International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging, 2009
Chronic constrictive pericarditis (CCP) is a clinical syndrome caused by compression of the heart due to a thickened or rigid pericardium. In the affluent West, the majority of cases of CCP are neither tuberculous nor calcific. In an American cohort undergoing pericardectomy for the condition, only 27% had calcification and under 10% had TB [1].
Purvis, J.A. +2 more
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Chronic constrictive pericarditis (CCP) is a clinical syndrome caused by compression of the heart due to a thickened or rigid pericardium. In the affluent West, the majority of cases of CCP are neither tuberculous nor calcific. In an American cohort undergoing pericardectomy for the condition, only 27% had calcification and under 10% had TB [1].
Purvis, J.A. +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Phonetica, 1978
Abstract From a fiberscope, the tip of which was swung from left to right in the pharynx, cinefilm frames were obtained which showed the cross-sectional shape of pharyngeal constrictions in back vowels. This information was combined with the information offered by X-ray pictures of the same subject phonating the same vowels on a ...
J, Gauffin, J, Sundberg
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Abstract From a fiberscope, the tip of which was swung from left to right in the pharynx, cinefilm frames were obtained which showed the cross-sectional shape of pharyngeal constrictions in back vowels. This information was combined with the information offered by X-ray pictures of the same subject phonating the same vowels on a ...
J, Gauffin, J, Sundberg
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Postgraduate Medicine, 2008
Often indistinguishable from restrictive cardiomyopathy and hepatic cirrohis, clinical acumen is essential in the recognition and diagnosis of constrictive pericarditis. A thorough medical history should rule out infectious disease exposure. A physical examination may include variable signs such as Kussmaul's sign, pulsus paradoxus, and pericardial ...
Thomas, Marnejon +2 more
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Often indistinguishable from restrictive cardiomyopathy and hepatic cirrohis, clinical acumen is essential in the recognition and diagnosis of constrictive pericarditis. A thorough medical history should rule out infectious disease exposure. A physical examination may include variable signs such as Kussmaul's sign, pulsus paradoxus, and pericardial ...
Thomas, Marnejon +2 more
openaire +2 more sources

