Results 261 to 270 of about 9,327 (308)
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The histotoxicity of cyanoacrylates
Neuroradiology, 1985Cyanoacrylates, a group of rapidly polymerizing adhesives, have found widespread uses in oral and general surgery as well as surgical subspecialties, for example as hemostatic and anastomotic agents. They have been utilized most recently as materials for embolotherapy of complex cerebral and extra-cerebral vascular anomalies.
H V, Vinters +3 more
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Measurement of airborne cyanoacrylates
The Annals of Occupational Hygiene, 1998The behaviour of common alkyl-2-cyanoacrylates in air has been investigated. Increasing humidity was found to increase the rate of polymerisation, although polymerisation is not instantaneous, even at high humidities. Sampling methods for these compounds have been studied and we are able to recommend a pumped Tenax sampling tube, although certain ...
C, Keen, I, Pengelly, J A, Groves
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Cyanoacrylates for Skin Closure
Dermatologic Clinics, 2005Cyanoacrylates (CAs) were not widely adopted for medical use until recently because of lingering concerns regarding the initial tissue toxicities of the short-chain CAs. The medium-chain CAs, primarily butyl-cyanoacrylate, have been widely used in Europe and Canada for several decades and have gone a long way in dispelling any lingering concerns about ...
William H, Eaglstein, Tory, Sullivan
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Carcinogenesis and Cyanoacrylate Adhesives
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1967To the Editor:— In a Letter to the Editor ( 201 :1052, 1967), Stephen C. Woodward, MD, Washington, DC, commenting upon the editorial entitled "Cyanoacrylate Tissue Adhesives" ( 201 :195, 1967) stated: "The probability of tumor induction by a slowly absorbed cyanoacrylate tissue adhesive appeared to be nonexistent." In the study of carcinogenesis by ...
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