Results 221 to 230 of about 129,555 (258)
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SURVEY OF INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION

Archives of Surgery, 1947
THE INTRODUCTION of the use of indwelling gastric and intestinal siphonage by Wangensteen1and the use of intravenously administered fluids and plasma and blood replacement as well as of other therapeutic and diagnostic aids, particularly the antibiotics and roentgen examinations, have allayed some of the dread of acute intestinal obstruction.
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Cholestyramine and Intestinal Obstruction

Pediatrics, 1978
The report by J. D. Lloyd-Still (Pediatrics 59:626, April 1977) on two infants with intrahepatic cholestasis who developed symptoms of intestinal obstruction after having been fed cholestyramine is of significant interest. It serves as a reminder that, generally speaking, a physician should have an idea about potential side effects of drugs given to ...
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Intestinal Obstruction in the Newborn

Pediatrics In Review, 1994
Obstruction of an infant's gastrointestinal (GI) tract can occur anywhere from the esophagus to the anus. For purposes of this review, the newborn infant will be defined as an infant from birth to 30 days of age. Both congenital and acquired obstructions will be addressed.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION

2002
Deya Marzouk, Christopher Lattimer
openaire   +1 more source

I. RENAL FUNCTION INFLUENCED BY INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION

Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1919
Whipple G H
exaly  

Intestinal obstruction

The American Journal of Surgery, 1952
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THE EFFECT OF SODIUM CHLORIDE ON THE CHEMICAL CHANGES IN THE BLOOD OF THE DOG AFTER PYLORIC AND INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION

Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1923
Russell L Haden, Thomas G Orr, T G Orr
exaly  

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