7 results match your criteria: "Catholic University of Sacred Heart School of Medicine[Affiliation]"

Objective: This study presents a retrospective analysis of long-term outcomes and factors influencing early and late results of a 20-year experience with open repair of atherosclerotic pararenal abdominal aortic aneurysms (PAAAs).

Methods: Records of consecutive patients who underwent open repair of PAAA between 1990 and 2010 at a tertiary referral care center were analyzed for demographics, comorbidities, operative variables, complications, and 30-day mortality. Long-term results were also assessed through a local electronic medical database and direct follow-up.

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Infections of the aorta and iliac arteries. Report of 20 years experience in a single centre.

Ann Ital Chir

January 2012

Vascular Surgery Unit, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Catholic University of Sacred Heart School of Medicine, "A. Gemelli" University Hospital, Rome, Italy.

Aim: Retrospective review of aorto-iliac infections in a single vascular surgery center.

Methods: From a retrospective review of their experience in the last 20 years, the Authors analyze a series of 12 cases of aorto-iliac infection. Prognostic factors, surgical options and results are discussed and compared with the literature.

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Post-mortem diagnosis of chronic alcohol abuse is a challenge for forensic experts due to the lack of pathognomonic morphological findings and often also inadequate background information. Objective methods demonstrating chronic excessive alcohol consumption would therefore be a useful tool for forensic pathologists. In clinical practice, several markers of chronic alcohol abuse have recently been introduced, among which carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) is the most accepted, but the use of these markers in autopsy has not yet been established.

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Background: The Heyde syndrome consists of the association of gastrointestinal bleeding from angiodysplasia with aortic valve stenosis. Its existence has been repeatedly questioned or reconfirmed, and the proposed underlying mechanism is the degradation of a coagulation factor caused by the stenotic valve, which facilitates bleeding from angiodysplastic lesions.

Patient Case: We report the case of a patient with severe recurrent small-intestinal bleeding from angiodysplasia, diagnosed by a videocapsule, and aortic valve stenosis.

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The effects of the formamidine pesticides amitraz and chlordimeform on the alpha(2)-adrenergic receptor subtype that mediates the release of [(3)H]noradrenaline by synaptosomes from rat hypothalami were studied. We initially characterized the presynaptic autoreceptor on noradrenergic nerve endings using selective antagonists. Yohimbine (a nonselective alpha(2) antagonist) and BRL 44408 (selective for subtypes alpha(2A)/alpha(2D)) diminished the inhibitory effect of xylazine on K(+)-evoked release of [(3)H]noradrenaline; the K(B) values were 481 and 154 nM, respectively.

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An in vitro study assessing the kinetics of drug release from antibiotic-fibrin seal compounds and the antibacterial efficacy of the delivered drug has been performed. Antibiotic sensitivity and the amount of drug released was measured by means of agar diffusion test. Standard and experimental curves were established for each antibiotic and each bacterial test in order to evaluate the quantities of the drug released during each 24 h period.

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