Publications by authors named "C T Skowlund"

Percutaneous vascular closure devices are being increasingly used as alternatives to manual compression for the closure of femoral arteriotomy after endovascular procedures as they appear to reduce time to ambulate, improve patient's comfort, and are implicated with cost saving. However, vascular closure devices have been associated with an increased risk of complications including hematoma formation, local bleeding, arteriovenous fistula formation, pseudoaneurysm and arterial leg ischemia. To our knowledge, if the above complications occur it is usually within the first 30 days after the procedure.

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Objective: Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) is a rare cause of stroke. A 21 year-old female presented to our institution in a rapidly deteriorating neurological state following failed systemic heparin therapy for treatment of superior sagittal sinus (SSS) thrombosis.

Methods: The patient underwent emergent mechanical thrombectomy of the thrombosed SSS using the 0.

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Objective And Importance: Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (CHS) is an infrequent syndrome observed in carotid endarterectomy and carotid angioplasty and stenting (CAS). The case history is presented of a patient with CT perfusion imaging of non-hemorrhagic CHS and reversal following medical treatment after CAS.

Clinical Presentation: A right-handed Caucasian man in his late 70s presented with sudden onset right upper extremity plegia and anesthesia and right facial parasthesias with complete resolution within 24 h.

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Magnetic resonance (MR) angiography is a widely used, noninvasive tool for evaluating the aorta and its branches. It is particularly useful in renal transplant recipients because it provides anatomic detail of the transplant artery without nephrotoxic effects. Volume rendering is underutilized in MR angiography, but this technique affords high-quality three-dimensional MR angiograms, especially in cases of tortuous or complex vascular anatomy.

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The results of numerical simulations for a growing biological film are presented to justify the use of steady-state biofilm models for approximating the behavior of both unlimited and shear-limited biofilms. For an unlimited biofilm we show that although the total biofilm thickness may continue to increase over time, the active biofilm volume will reach a constant value. We also show that the profile of active microorganisms within the biofilm will become constant with respect to the biofilm/fluid interface and simply move outward as the biofilm thickness increases.

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