Results 201 to 210 of about 63,937 (236)
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Occlusive Disease of Subclavian Artery
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966Fourteen patients with localized atherosclerotic obstruction of the subclavian artery were found to have considerable variation in symptoms. Seven patients had ischemic symptoms of the upper extremity, three patients manifested only vertebral-basilar insufficiency, and four had combined symptoms of cerebral and arm ischemia.
Frank C. Spencer, Lester R. Bryant
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Carotid artery occlusive disease
Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine, 2000Stroke is the third most common cause of death and the leading cause of disability in the United States. Management of identifiable risk factors and careful selection of patients for operative intervention constitute the current approach to reducing the morbidity and mortality associated with stroke.
Brajesh K. Lal, Robert W. Hobson
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Renal Artery Occlusive Disease
Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America, 1991Renal artery occlusive disease, from either atherosclerosis or fibrous dysplasia, may cause hypertension or renal insufficiency. Hypertension results from increased activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. There are several ways to evaluate this system as well as several pharmacologic agents that will intervene and modulate the ...
Robert B. Smith +2 more
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Occlusive Disease in Renal Arteries
Archives of Surgery, 1964Correlation between preoperative diagnostic tests and relief of hypertension after renal revascularization procedures remains difficult and uncertain. 1,2 A small but significant number of patients do not experience a satisfactory decrease in blood pressure after a technically successful arterial restoration. Predictability of the surgical result based
Allan D. Callow, Ralph A. Deterling
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Carotid Artery Occlusive Disease
Surgical Clinics of North America, 2013Carotid disease is a major contributor to stroke, one of the leading causes of death and disability in the United States. Clinically significant stenosis can be detected by duplex ultrasound using well-established criteria. In addition to optimal medical management, surgical and endovascular revascularizations of carotid disease have been demonstrated ...
Heron E. Rodriguez, Courtney M. Daly
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2018
Arterial occlusions refer to a type of diseases mainly characterized by artery stenosis or occlusion. They are frequently seen in peripheral arteries, usually giving rise to the ischemia or necrosis of important distal tissues or organs, etc. With the advent of population aging, arteriosclerosis has become the pathogenesis basis of most occlusive ...
Zaiping Jing +6 more
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Arterial occlusions refer to a type of diseases mainly characterized by artery stenosis or occlusion. They are frequently seen in peripheral arteries, usually giving rise to the ischemia or necrosis of important distal tissues or organs, etc. With the advent of population aging, arteriosclerosis has become the pathogenesis basis of most occlusive ...
Zaiping Jing +6 more
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Bypass for Innominate Artery Occlusive Disease
World Neurosurgery, 2018The innominate artery, also known as the brachiocephalic artery, is the first vessel off the aortic arch and provides blood to the right arm, neck, and head. Occlusion of the innominate artery can be treated with endarterectomy, angioplasty, stenting, and bypass grafting.
Kuhn, Anna L. +2 more
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Peripheral arterial occlusive disease
Vasa, 2007This article updates the diagnostic and therapeutic management of patients with peripheral arterial disease.
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Mesenteric Artery Occlusive Disease
Cardiology Clinics, 1991Emboli, thrombi, atherosclerotic occlusion, and mesenteric low-flow state can produce mesenteric ischemia. Improved survival has resulted from early diagnosis and improved maintenance of hemodynamic and cardiac stability and early surgery when required. Diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic mesenteric ischemia are discussed.
Moore Wm, Hollier Lh
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1983
The clinical features of arterial insufficiency in the lower limb are reflected by the relative needs of various tissues for oxygen and nourishment. Exercising muscle, being the most active metabolic tissue in a limb, registers its relative anoxia by stimulating pain receptors. This pain is brought on by exercise and relieved by rest.
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The clinical features of arterial insufficiency in the lower limb are reflected by the relative needs of various tissues for oxygen and nourishment. Exercising muscle, being the most active metabolic tissue in a limb, registers its relative anoxia by stimulating pain receptors. This pain is brought on by exercise and relieved by rest.
openaire +2 more sources

