Results 221 to 230 of about 187,515 (269)
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Internal Thoracic Artery: To Skeletonize or Not to Skeletonize?

The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 2005
The internal thoracic artery has been the most reliable graft material used in coronary artery bypass grafting with an excellent long-term patency rate. Complete myocardial revascularization with internal thoracic arteries improves long-term survival and decreases the rate of repeat operations compared with vein grafts.
Shahzad G, Raja, Gilles D, Dreyfus
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Skeletons in the Cabinet:

2023
The chapter examines the intersection of collective historical memory, commemoration, and archaeology in an urban setting. As the first historic district in New York State, the Stockade Neighborhood of Schenectady is distinguished as a dynamic site of memory. The key event that has shaped this collective historical memory is the Massacre of 1690.
Andrew R. Beaupré   +2 more
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The dynamic skeleton

Reviews in Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders, 2015
Adding to its well-known roles in locomotion and calcium balance, the skeleton has recently been appreciated as a true endocrine organ. Bone remodeling, a highly dynamic process, requires synchronized activities and crosstalk between bone cells. Discovery and characterization of the Wnt/β catenin pathway in bone formation, FGF23 regulation of phosphate
Anda, Gonciulea, Suzanne Jan, de Beur
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Neutrography of the skeleton

International Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Biology, 1980
Abstract Neutrography is a technique which complements conventional radiography for the analysis of osseous specimens. Neutron images obtained of the rat tibia have been interpreted by inducing selective changes of bony composition by dessication, decalcification and calcination, and by observing the impact of these changes on the neutrographic ...
B, Graf   +5 more
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Fluoride and the Skeleton

Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences, 1996
Fluoride has the potential to increase skeletal mass to a greater extent than any other pharmacologic agent, yet it has proven difficult to translate this into therapeutic benefit for patients with low bone mass in diseases such as osteoporosis. This apparent paradox can be explained in part by toxic actions of the ion on skeletal mineralization ...
Michael Kleerekoper, R. Vieth
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The Skeleton of the Internet

2010 IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference GLOBECOM 2010, 2010
Research works concerning AS (Autonomous Systems) level Internet topology measurements typically aim at obtaining near-complete maps of the AS structure. In this paper, we take a fundamentally different approach by inspecting several concurrently visible local views of the AS graph stored at individual BGP route servers.
Márton Csernai   +4 more
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On the evolution of the skeleton

Proceedings of the Seventh IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision, 1999
It is commonly held that skeleton variation due to noise is unmanageable. It is also believed that smoothing, invoked to combat noise, creates no new structures, as in the causality principle for smoothing images. We demonstrate that both views are incorrect.
Jonas August   +2 more
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The Aging Skeleton

Clinics in Geriatric Medicine, 1985
The importance of bone loss with aging increases year by year. When Bismarck set the age of retirement at 65, it did not cost Prussia much because few lived to receive pensions. At the turn of the century, only 4.1 per cent of our population was 65 or older.
G S, Gordan, H K, Genant
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Steroids and the Skeleton

Radiology, 1961
Harvey Cushing in 1932 first described the syndrome of obesity, hypertension, weakness, and depression of sexual function which has since become classically designated by his name. The condition was attributed by him to overproduction of pituitary adrenocorticotrophic hormone in association with the presence of a basophil adenoma.
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Duverney’s Skeletons

Isis, 2003
In 1730, shortly before his death, the Paris anatomist Joseph-Guichard Duverney wrote his will, leaving his anatomical specimens to the Académie des Sciences, of which he was a member. But the will was disputed by Pierre Chirac, supervisor of the Jardin du Roi where Duverney, as professor of anatomy, had performed most of the dissections that produced ...
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