Results 251 to 260 of about 131,755 (294)
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Undiagnosing Coronary Thrombosis

Postgraduate Medicine, 1952
Case histories are presented of 4 patients who suffered acute episodes of chest pain, dyspnea and shock, originally diagnosed as acute coronary occlusion. In each case more careful studies led to the correct diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. The importance of making the correct differential diagnosis in these two conditions is stressed and the salient ...
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The prevention of coronary thrombosis

Public Health, 1984
Abstract The influence of a health education course on the factors causing coronary thrombosis, including smoking, diet and lack of exercise, has been examined over a 2-year-period. At the same time, weight, blood pressure and blood cholesterol levels have been monitored. The results of health education, as shown in Table 1, were satisfactory but the
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Pathophysiology of coronary thrombosis.

Seminars in interventional cardiology : SIIC, 2000
Detailed knowledge of the pathophysiology as well as the dynamic nature of coronary thrombus formation provides a valuable tool for correct management and proper adjunctive therapy in patients with acute coronary syndromes. Coronary thrombosis is in the majority of cases caused by disruption or fissuring of an atherosclerotic plaque.
Kristensen, S.D.   +2 more
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CORONARY THROMBOSIS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1930
The diagnosis of coronary thrombosis should not be difficult if the condition is kept in mind. The history of angina, the presence of shock, the gradual diminution in the strength of the heart sounds, the presence of arrhythmia, the signs of congestion at the bases of the lungs, an elevation in the number of leukocytes and a low blood pressure form a ...
AARON BELL, HAROLD E. B. PARDEE
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TUBERCULOSIS AND CORONARY THROMBOSIS

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1957
Excerpt Attention has recently been called to the low incidence of coronary disease in various groups throughout the world.
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CORONARY THROMBOSIS.

The Lancet, 1931
Autopsy on the body of a girl aged 4 months and 8 days revealed coronary thrombosis. A photograph of the heart (fig. 1) shows the thrombus in the vessel cut transversely, and the distal portion of the vessel distended by the thrombus in situ. The wall of the left ventricle shows dimpling due to thinning of the ventricular wall.
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Coronary thrombosis without coronary atherosclerosis

The American Journal of Cardiology, 1969
Abstract The case of a patient with extensive coronary artery thrombosis, with myocardial infarction but without coronary atherosclerosis, is presented. Although a review of the literature was not helpful in locating similar reports, the findings were thought to represent an exaggerated example of the process that ordinarily leads to myocardial ...
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CORONARY THROMBOSIS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1946
R L, FISHER, M, ZUKERMAN
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CORONARY THROMBOSIS

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1934
Acquired perforation of the infarcted interventricular septum is a rare condition which is infrequently diagnosed. The only reported case in which an antemortem diagnosis was established is that of Brunn in 1923. The purpose of this report is to present another case of this complication of coronary thrombosis and to review the subject completely.
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Coronary thrombosis

Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis, 1992
R, Ilia, M, Remetz
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