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Knuiman MW, Divitini ML, Welborn TA, Bartholomew H
Knuiman MW, Divitini ML, Welborn TA, Bartholomew H

... the period 1966 to 1981. The risk factors considered were systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, body mass index, triceps fatfold, and cholesterol. All risk factors showed positive familial correlations, with correlations generally being lower for spouses than for parent-offspring pairs ...
Weak brain damage under optimal controlled
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... concern along with a concomitant increase in complex aortic operations in the aged. Postoperative delirium, short-term memory dysfunction and higher brain dysfunction are known side effects in heart surgery with CPB in the aged people[ ]. Cerebral blood flow is kept constant by an autoregulatory mec ...
Essentials of Pathophysiology CHAPTER 13 THE RED BLOOD CELL AND ALTERATIONS
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... In the Hardy-Wienberg equation q=.1 Therefore p= 1-.1=.9 or 90% of genes are normal q2 = percent with sickle disease = (.1)2 = .01 =1% Question: What is the % heterozygous From equations 2pq= 2(.1*.9) =.18 or 18% have the trait without the disease ...
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Blood Donation - Some Facts

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THE DAILY CLIPS January 13, 2011

... time in the trauma center at Duke University Medical Center. But it and similar treatments drew controversyover patient consent and safety. In 2008, a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that PolyHeme and four other synthetic blood products put patients at higher ...
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ELECTRONIC DEMONSTRATION OF BLOOD CELL AGGLUTININS

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Blood transfusion Part 1 - Basics - e-safe

... The standard temperature used is 1°- 6°C, but the preservatives may vary. When using acid-citratedextrose (ACD), citrate-phosphate-dextrose (CPD) or citrate-phosphate-double dextrose (CP2D), the storage is limited to 21 days, but with citrate-phosphate-dextrose-adenine (CPDA1) this can be extended t ...
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242 Blood transfusion part 1 - Basics

... The standard temperature used is 1°- 6°C, but the preservatives may vary. When using acid-citratedextrose (ACD), citrate-phosphate-dextrose (CPD) or citrate-phosphate-double dextrose (CP2D), the storage is limited to 21 days, but with citrate-phosphate-dextrose-adenine (CPDA1) this can be extended t ...
A simulation study on photoacoustic signals from red blood cells
A simulation study on photoacoustic signals from red blood cells

... with a wide range of pathological conditions, such as, acute myocardial infarction, cerebral ischemia, diabetes, and sickle cell disease.5–7 It occurs due to the presence of large plasma proteins or macromolecules (e.g., fibrinogen) in blood in abnormal levels8 and can lead to various cardiovascular ...
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Hemorheology

Hemorheology, also spelled haemorheology (from the Greek ‘αἷμα, haima ""blood"" and rheology), or blood rheology, is the study of flow properties of blood and its elements of plasma and cells. Proper tissue perfusion can occur only when blood's rheological properties are within certain levels. Alterations of these properties play significant roles in disease processes. Blood viscosity is determined by plasma viscosity, hematocrit (volume fraction of red blood cell, which constitute 99.9% of the cellular elements) and mechanical properties of red blood cells. Red blood cells have unique mechanical behavior, which can be discussed under the terms erythrocyte deformability and erythrocyte aggregation. Because of that, blood behaves as a non-Newtonian fluid. As such, the viscosity of blood varies with shear rate. Blood becomes less viscous at high shear rates like those experienced in peak-systole. Contrarily, during end-diastole, blood moves more slowly and becomes thicker and stickier. Therefore, blood is a shear-thinning fluid.
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