Results 221 to 230 of about 1,073,825 (268)
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Archives of Family Medicine, 1992
Skin and subcutaneous tissue necrosis is a rare complication of warfarin therapy. Although the incidence is low, with increased use of warfarin family physicians need to be aware of this potentially catastrophic event. This article reviews the history of warfarin necrosis and discusses its clinical presentation.
J T, McKnight +2 more
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Skin and subcutaneous tissue necrosis is a rare complication of warfarin therapy. Although the incidence is low, with increased use of warfarin family physicians need to be aware of this potentially catastrophic event. This article reviews the history of warfarin necrosis and discusses its clinical presentation.
J T, McKnight +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Not all tumour necrosis is granular necrosis
Pathology, 2023Hemamali Samaratunga +2 more
openaire +4 more sources
Apoptosis, 2010
Necrosis was long regarded as an accidental cell death process resulting from overwhelming cellular injury such as chemical or physical disruption of the plasma membrane. Such a definition, however, proved to be inapplicable to many necrotic scenarios.
Tobias, Eisenberg +4 more
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Necrosis was long regarded as an accidental cell death process resulting from overwhelming cellular injury such as chemical or physical disruption of the plasma membrane. Such a definition, however, proved to be inapplicable to many necrotic scenarios.
Tobias, Eisenberg +4 more
openaire +2 more sources
Fat Necrosis – a Cause of Pancreatic Parenchymal Necrosis?
Digestion, 2009Acute pancreatic necrosis resulted when oleic acid or olive oil was injected into the pancreatic duct of rats. After injection of droplets of both lipids into the pancreatic interstitial tissue, coagulation-type necrosis of acinar tissue developed adjacent to these droplets. Mono-olein or paraffin oil caused no histological alterations of acinar cells.
H, Schmidt, P G, Lankisch
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Renal cortical necrosis and papillary necrosis in an infant
The British Journal of Radiology, 1976Bilateral renal cortical necrosis (BRCN) and renal papillary necrosis have been reported in infancy as a complication of gastro-enteritis, perinatal asphyxia, utero-placental haemorrhage, septicaemia, exsanguination, kernicterus, eclampsia, renal vein thrombosis, fetomaternal transfusion and anoxic shock (Mauer and Nogrady, 1969; Leonidas, Berdon and ...
M R, Funston, B J, Cremin, I J, Tidbury
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Pontosubicular Necrosis and Hyperoxemia
Pediatrics, 1979Pontosubicular necrosis (PSN) is confined to a short perinatal developmental period and is apparently related to asphyxia at birth. Neuronal necrosis with karyorrhexis and proliferative changes in astrocytes are most prominent in the pontine gray matter and subiculum of the hippocampus.
M, Ahdab-Barmada, J, Moossy, M, Painter
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Archiv f�r Klinische und Experimentelle Dermatologie, 1966
G W, Korting, F, Nürnberger
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G W, Korting, F, Nürnberger
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