Results 311 to 320 of about 2,521,623 (328)
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Spontaneous bleeding in thrombocytopenia: Is it really spontaneous?

Transfusion Clinique et Biologique, 2018
Spontaneous bleeding is a clinical hallmark of thrombocytopenia and can take multiple forms including petechiae, epistaxis, gum bleeding, or, in worst cases, intracranial hemorrhage. Those bleeding events are called " spontaneous " because they occur in the absence of overt trauma.
Soumaya Jadoui, Benoît Ho-Tin-Noé
openaire   +2 more sources

SPONTANEOUS ABORTION

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1993
Spontaneous abortion rates vary with maternal age, but the overall incidence is approximately 2% of clinically recognized pregnancies. The incidence of clinically unrecognized loss is approximately 20%. Most early fetal losses are caused by abnormal karyotypes.
B S, Apgar, C A, Churgay
openaire   +2 more sources

Spontaneous Vesiculation and Spontaneous Liposomes

Journal of Liposome Research, 1999
AbstractThermodynamics of liposome systems and their spontaneous vesicula-tion are briefly introduced. The importance of the system size on the stable structure is emphasized. Several examples of spontaneous vesiculation due to soft lipid bilayers (entropic stabilization) and asymmetric bilayers (enthalpic stabilization) are discussed.
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Spontaneous Deracemization

Israel Journal of Chemistry, 2011
AbstractChirality can emerge spontaneously from racemizing samples in a remarkably efficient manner. The effect results from the stochastic generation of an excess of one enantiomer in the solid and subsequent amplification of the initial material to the bulk. In this review we shall give examples showing how this effect has proved to be an inspiration
Amabilino, David B., Kellogg, Richard M.
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Spontaneous ventriculocisternostomy

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 1985
A case of aqueductal steniosis with hydrocephalus who had spontaneous ventriculocisternostomy is reported. Conrary ventriculogram showed extravasation of contrast through suprapineal recess. The patient was treated by ventriculoatrial shunt following which he developed status epilepticus from which he was brought round and discharged on 10th operative ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Spontaneous pneumothorax.

Clinical evidence, 2005
The incidence of spontaneous pneumothorax is 24/100,000 a year in men and 9.9/100,000 in women in England and Wales. The major contributing factor is smoking, which increases the likelihood by 22 times in men, and by 8 times in women. While death from spontaneous pneumothorax is rare, rates of recurrence are high, with one study of men in the US ...
openaire   +5 more sources

Redefining Spontaneity

2012
This paper is an attempt at cross-disciplinary understanding of the concept of spontaneity. It combines insights from performance theory with systems theory and neurobiology. However, we are aware of the major shift in research methodology from technical to more contextual and pragmatic approach.
openaire   +4 more sources

Apperception and spontaneity

International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 1997
Abstract The interest contemporary philosophy takes in Kant's notion of apperception is restricted to his criticism of the Cartesian Ego and to his refutation of scepticism, but there is a profound lack of concern for the notion itself and for the act of spontaneity in particular which is connected with the use of the word T. Starting from a comparison
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Spontaneous pneumomediastinum

ANZ Journal of Surgery, 2001
H. T. Leong, K. F. Lee, D. P. C. Chung
openaire   +3 more sources

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