182 results match your criteria: "and Toronto General Hospital[Affiliation]"

The natural history of small renal masses.

J Urol

October 2000

Division of Urology, Departments of Surgery and Diagnostic Imaging, University of Toronto, Princess Margaret Hospital and Toronto General Hospital, and Department of Biostatistics, Princess Margaret Hospital and Sunnybrook and Women's College He.

Purpose: Ultrasound, computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are widely available. Incidentally discovered small renal masses are reported more frequently. Most of these masses are low stage renal cell carcinomas.

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Systemic and nontraditional markers of endothelial dysfunction.

Can J Cardiol

August 2000

University of Toronto, and Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Canada.

Endothelial cells control the balance between a number of opposing biological processes. Injury to these cells leads to a shift in this delicate balance; the resultant endothelial dysfunction ultimately leads to atherosclerotic disease. Specific markers of endothelial dysfunction can be used to detect and monitor the progression of atherosclerosis; they can also be used to study the pathogenesis of disease.

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Gender and psychosomatic aspects of ischemic heart disease.

J Psychosom Res

October 2000

Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto and Toronto General Hospital, 8EN-212, M5G 2C4, Toronto, ON, Canada.

While women and their doctors have traditionally worried about mortality from breast and gynecological malignancies, over the past 5 years they have come to realize that ischemic cardiac disease (IHD) is the number one killer of women in most Western countries. This has led to public and professional education campaigns and a new emphasis on gender and gender-specific research in IHD. Unfortunately, this literature remains poorly developed and much work remains to be done.

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Reply.

Intensive Care Med

September 1999

Mount Sinai Hospital and Toronto General Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5G 1X5, Canada.

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The recruitment of mononuclear leukocytes and formation of intimal macrophage-rich lesions at specific sites of the arterial tree are key events in atherogenesis. Inducible endothelial cell adhesion molecules may participate in this process. In aortas of normal chow-fed wild-type mice and rabbits, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), but not E-selectin, were expressed by endothelial cells in regions predisposed to atherosclerotic lesion formation.

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