Objective: To determine whether a compression procedure guided by the patient's mean arterial pressure value (experimental) is safe and effective and superior to a compression procedure using 15 cubic centimeters of air in the device (standard) in patients undergoing radial artery catheterization.
Methods: We performed a randomized, single-center study, which included patients undergoing catheterization of the radial artery for diagnosis or percutaneous coronary intervention, in whom the sheath was removed at the end of procedure and the radial artery was compressed for 3 h with a pneumatic device (TR Band Terumo). The arteries were evaluated between 24 and 72 h after the procedure, using a plethysmography curve with a reverse flow test followed by bidirectional Doppler.
It has been shown that intraductal injections of bile salts into the bile-pancreatic ducts of dogs or rats were immediately followed by acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis and, some months later, by persisting chronic pancreatitis. The study described in this article was designed to test the assumption that these chronic lesions were due to ductal strictures secondary to the toxic effect of bile salts. The bile-pancreatic ducts of 100 rats were injected with 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Gastroenterol
March 1992
One hundred and eighteen consecutive patients presenting with pancreatic calculi have been studied by means of plain films of the abdomen and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. Patients were divided into the following groups: 1) Evenly calcified calculi, 74 patients, 66 men, aged at onset (M +/- SM) 40 +/- 10 years; daily consumption of alcohol, 157 +/- 121 g, and of tobacco, 26 +/- 15 cigarettes. Two patients presented with another case in the same family.
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