Results 261 to 270 of about 903,082 (294)
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Cerebral Edema

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1977
Great strides have been made in understanding the pathogenesis of cerebral edema. Treatment is usually successful, particularly with the newer modes of management (mannitol, steroids, hyperventilation); however, cerebral edema is occasionally resistant to all modes of therapy.
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Vigabatrin edema

Neurology, 1995
COCITO, LEONARDO, MAFFINI, MAURA
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Brain Edema

1986
Current concepts on the development of brain edema are briefly reviewed. The common classification into vasogenic and cytotoxic edema is a simplification and does not cover all types of edema. Alternative routes of edema resolution are discussed. More basic data on the mechanisms of development and regression of brain edema are needed before more ...
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Intracellular Edema

2017
The macula is predisposed to edema in various retinal conditions, even when the insult is remote from the macula. The various factors that may predispose the macula to edema include high metabolic activity, radial arrangement of the Henle's layer, lack of inner layers at the fovea, and lack of blood supply at the fovea.
Raja, Narayanan, Baruch D, Kuppermann
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Nephritic edema

Seminars in Nephrology, 2001
Nephritic edema results from the primary retention of salt. Acute glomerulonephritis is the prototypical form of the disorder. The stimulus for the salt retention arises within the kidney by an unknown mechanism. As effective arterial blood volume (EABV) was normal at the start of the disease process, it becomes expanded as salt and water are added to ...
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Cerebral Edema

Neurosurgery Clinics of North America, 1994
Cerebral edema continues to plague clinicians caring for patients with acute catastrophic neurologic disease. The defect responsible for the accumulation of water in the brain appears to reflect loss of the strict permeability barrier of the cerebral vasculature.
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Idiopathic Edema

2015
Idiopathic edema is a common disorder in younger women. In some cases, edema may be induced by abuse of diuretics for the purpose of weight reduction. In other cases, the pathogenesis of edema is obscure. Increased orthostatic fluid retention secondary to abnormal orthostatic venous 'pooling' and shifting of intravascular fluid into the interstitial ...
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Edema

Annual Review of Medicine, 1970
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Macular Edema

International Ophthalmology Clinics, 1999
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Macular Edema

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1946
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