Results 271 to 280 of about 3,357,423 (299)
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Intestinal failure

British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 2007
The small bowel is a marvellous organ. First, it absorbs nutrients on behalf of all the other organs of the body. This function is not entirely ‘altruistic’: enteric (small-bowel) epithelium is itself nourished by luminal nutrients, which explains its disproportionately severe atrophy in starvation or total parenteral nutrition.
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Hematologic Failure

Seminars in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2011
Hematologic factors, in particular platelets and the coagulation system, play an important role in the pathogenesis of organ failure in the intensive care unit. Failure of these hematologic systems is common in intensive care patients and may range from isolated thrombocytopenia or prolonged global clotting tests to complex defects, such as ...
Marcel, Levi, Marcus, Schultz
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Intestinal failure

Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 2005
The gastrointestinal tract plays a major role in critical illness. We will review four common problem areas pertaining to the gut and abdominal compartment that intensivists managing critically ill patients must deal with on an everyday basis.In the area of enteral nutrition, there have been concerns that early feeding in hemodynamically unstable ...
Ziad N, Kutayli   +2 more
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SCHOOL FAILURE

Pediatrics, 1965
Modern preventive pediatrics recognizes that the school life of the child is one of the important environmental forces affecting his total well-being. Learning difficulties, or any problems interfering with adequate functioning in school, thus enter within the province of pediatric care.
K, GLASER, R L, CLEMMENS
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Systemic Failures

Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics, 2020
The 12 narratives highlight persisting structural failures of health care delivery systems, which marginalize and disempower patients. These systemic failures coalesce around three major, sometimes overlapping forces. First, financial incentives drive virtually every aspect of health care.
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Heart Failure

The Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing, 2007
Heart failure is the most common reason for hospital admission in the United States. All nurses, regardless of their specialty, should be familiar with this clinical syndrome. This column describes the pathophysiology and treatment of heart failure.
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Liver failure

Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 2005
Liver failure is a rare but life-threatening condition affecting a multitude of other organ systems, most notably the brain and kidneys, following severe hepatocellular injury. Liver failure may develop in the absence ('acute') or presence ('acute-on-chronic') of liver disease with substantial differences in pathophysiology and therapeutic options ...
Michael, Bauer   +2 more
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Cardiac Failure*

Journal of Small Animal Practice, 1967
Abstract— —The physiological mechanisms involved in increasing cardiac output are described and designated as the cardiac reserves. The utilization of these reserves in maintaining life when the heart is failing illustrates the origin of some of the clinical signs observed.
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HEART-FAILURE IN RESPIRATORY FAILURE

The Lancet, 1968
R, Skalak, P I, Brånemark
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Intestinal failure

Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 2000
Abstract The recognition of intestinal failure (IF) as a distinct clinical entity over the past 20 years has primarily come about through the emergence of increasingly successful treatment based on use of intravenous nutrition delivered both in hospital and at home.
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