Results 271 to 280 of about 2,711,990 (315)
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Thrombospondin-1 in vascular development, vascular function, and vascular disease
Seminars in Cell & Developmental BiologyAngiogenesis is vital to developmental, regenerative and repair processes. It is normally regulated by a balanced production of pro- and anti-angiogenic factors. Alterations in this balance under pathological conditions are generally mediated through up-regulation of pro-angiogenic and/or downregulation of anti-angiogenic factors, leading to growth of ...
Bo Liu +4 more
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Vascular cognitive impairment and vascular dementia
Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 2002The criteria for vascular dementia (VaD) depend on first diagnosing dementia using Alzheimer-type criteria, upon which are superimposed vascular events, usually following a stroke model. This if often inappropriate, however, as memory loss is not always prominent in VaD.
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RAGE, vascular tone and vascular disease
Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 2009Evidence provided by both clinical and pre-clinical studies regarding a central involvement of the receptor for advanced glycation endproducts (RAGE) in vascular disease continues to mount. RAGE is upregulated as a consequence of activation of the ubiquitous pro-inflammatory transcription factor NF-kappaB which is activated in response to diverse ...
David G S, Farmer, Simon, Kennedy
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Vascular Holism: The Epidemiology of Vascular Disease
Annals of Vascular Surgery, 1995This article reviews the distinguishing features of epidemiology and clinical medicine and their interdependence in clinical epidemiology as applied to vascular disease. Selected literature is reviewed to emphasize the principles of clinical epidemiology for five vascular disorders: abdominal aortic aneurysms, lower extremity peripheral arterial ...
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Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2010
Vascular malformations are rare but important skin disorders in children, which often require multidisciplinary care. The goal of this article is to orient pediatricians to the various types of vascular malformations. We discuss the clinical characteristics, diagnostic criteria, and management of capillary, venous, arteriovenous, and lymphatic ...
Jennifer T, Huang, Marilyn G, Liang
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Vascular malformations are rare but important skin disorders in children, which often require multidisciplinary care. The goal of this article is to orient pediatricians to the various types of vascular malformations. We discuss the clinical characteristics, diagnostic criteria, and management of capillary, venous, arteriovenous, and lymphatic ...
Jennifer T, Huang, Marilyn G, Liang
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Vascular Casting for the Study of Vascular Morphogenesis
2014Microvascularity and angiogenesis play a pivotal role during normal growth and in a variety of pathological conditions such as inflammation, tumor growth, macular degeneration, and tissue regeneration. Vascular corrosion casting has been established as a method to analyze and evaluate two- and three-dimensionally the morphology and architecture of ...
Maximilian, Ackermann +1 more
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Vascular changes in vascularized composite allotransplantation
Current Opinion in Organ TransplantationPurpose of review Allograft vasculopathy in vascularized composite allografts (VCA) remains understudied. This review explores the vascular changes in VCA, focused on recent literature. Recent findings Allograft vasculopathy in VCA generally includes progressive concentric ...
Ethan Y, Song +2 more
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The British Journal of Radiology, 1976
An eight-year-old boy had always done less well than his healthy twin brother. He was found to be in renal failure, with a blood urea of 18 mmol./l., and glomerular filtration rate of 9 ml./minute (corrected EDTA clearance). The clinical diagnosis was an incomplete variant of the prune-belly syndrome.
T, Sherwood, D I, Williams
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An eight-year-old boy had always done less well than his healthy twin brother. He was found to be in renal failure, with a blood urea of 18 mmol./l., and glomerular filtration rate of 9 ml./minute (corrected EDTA clearance). The clinical diagnosis was an incomplete variant of the prune-belly syndrome.
T, Sherwood, D I, Williams
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Neurological Sciences, 2006
Epidemiological, clinical, neuropsychological and neuroimaging features characterise vascular dementia (VaD) from other dementias of non-Alzheimer type. VaD does not represent a single entity, but quite a large group of conditions characterised by different pathophysiological correlates and various clinical findings.
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Epidemiological, clinical, neuropsychological and neuroimaging features characterise vascular dementia (VaD) from other dementias of non-Alzheimer type. VaD does not represent a single entity, but quite a large group of conditions characterised by different pathophysiological correlates and various clinical findings.
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