Results 141 to 150 of about 2,454 (180)
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Hemorheology in the erythrocytoses.

The Mount Sinai journal of medicine, New York, 2001
n vitro, rheological studies establish that whole blood viscosity and yield stress are high in patients with an erythrocytosis. However, a number of factors ensure that these patients, under physiological conditions, do not show the clinical features observed in other hyperviscosity states.
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Hemorheology

2008
Anne M. Robertson   +2 more
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Hemorheology, Thrombogenesis, and Atherosclerosis

Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis, 1993
E, Ernst, W, Koenig
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Hemorheology

2012
Robert L. Sainburg   +27 more
openaire   +1 more source

HEMORHEOLOGY

The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1970
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Hemorheology

2000
Giovanni Ciufetti, Rita Lombardini
openaire   +1 more source

[Hemorheology and angiology].

Fortschritte der Medizin, 1992
Changes in blood flow are of particular importance in vascular diseases due to the perfusion-reducing effect of increased blood viscosity. Abnormal blood rheology found in occlusive arterial disease has been shown to be associated with the extent and the prognosis of the disease.
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[Hemorheology and stroke].

Fortschritte der Medizin, 1992
The physiology of the blood and the vascular system suggest that the rheological properties of blood gain in importance as arteriosclerotic vascular changes progress. Thus, for example, in arterial segments distal to a stenosis, a decrease in perfusion pressure (in the nutritive vessels) occurs--a situation that is probably of causative relevance in a ...
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Nimodipine and phosphatidylcholine in clinical hemorheology

Pharmacological Research, 1990
R Scalia
exaly  

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