Results 281 to 290 of about 4,213,516 (338)
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The Contrast Medium

1982
During the second world war, barium was the generally accepted contrast medium for examination of the small intestine. The 40-year-old custom of mixing nutrients with the contrast medium was abandoned since this appeared to be the main reason that good mucosal patterns could not be obtained. The importance of fine demonstration of anatomical detail had
Johan L. Sellink, Roscoe E. Miller
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Contrast Medium Utilization

2009
Contrast medium (CM) administration remains an integral part of thoracic and cardiovascular CT. While simple, empiric injection protocols (fixed volume and fixed scanning delay) are sufficient for non-vascular CM-enhanced thoracic CT, cardiac and CT angiographic applications require more sophistication.
Dominik Fleischmann, Margaret C. C. Lin
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Radiographic Contrast Medium-Induced Glossitis

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1985
A new complication of intravenous radiographic contrast medium administration is recognized: severe glossitis. The pathophysiology of adverse reactions to contrast media is briefly reviewed.
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Contrast-Medium Administration

2012
The optimization of any contrast medium injection protocol should be aimed at achieving the best arterial and/or parenchymal enhancement according to the clinical indication. Arterial and parenchymal enhancements influence the accuracy of the MDCT examination and are generally affected by different kinetics. Arterial enhancement is determined mainly by
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BRONCHOGRAPHIC CONTRAST MEDIUMS.

California medicine, 2008
In a study of 102 bronchograms for purposes of comparing the contrast medium Visciodol(R) (a mixture of iodized peanut oil and powdered sulfanilamide) with Iodochlorol(R) (an iodized poppyseed oil), it was observed that Visciodol is more readily administered, produces better bronchograms with less alveolar filling and clears from the lungs far more ...
H F, Martin, L F, O'Neil
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Contrast Medium Injection Technique

2016
The general goal of intravenous contrast medium (CM) delivery in computed tomography (CT) is to achieve adequate enhancement of the organ or vessels within the anatomic territory of interest, synchronized with the CT acquisition. This apparently simple goal is increasingly difficult to achieve with rapidly and continuously evolving multiple detector ...
Dominik Fleischmann, Richard L. Hallett
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Excretion of contrast medium

The British Journal of Radiology, 1974
We are grateful to Professor Dure-Smith for his comments. The value of his work, much of which he cites, on excretion of contrast medium by the healthy kidney is not here in dispute. His speculation about events in chronic renal failure may be valid.
D. O. Rees   +4 more
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[Contrast medium induced nephropathy].

Vnitrni lekarstvi, 2007
Contrast medium indicated nephropathy (CMIN) is a iatrogenic disorder by which patients become inflicted due to contrast medium exposure. Prevalence of this disorder might increase as more and more diagnostic and intervence radiology has been used. The article is focused on known pathofysiological mechanisms that are responsible for CMIN incidence ...
D, Krusová, K, Sevela
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Contrast Medium-Induced Nephropathy

2009
A sudden drop in renal function after exposure to contrast media was first described more than 60 years ago. Contrast medium-induced nephropathy (CIN) is still considered an important acute adverse reaction. Despite both clinical and experimental research, its pathophysiology is still unclear.
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