Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 310
pro vyhledávání: '"J.D. Swales"'
Autor:
J.D. Swales
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Hypertension. 7:873-876
Autor:
J.D. Swales
Publikováno v:
British Journal of Anaesthesia. 67:146-153
A reduction in the serum concentration of sodium is one of the commonest biochemical abnormalities in hospital inpatients. In most cases it should be regarded as an incidental finding which will be corrected with treatment of the underlying condition
Autor:
J.D. Swales
Publikováno v:
QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians. 89(4)
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Hypertension. 13:S217-S218
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Hypertension. 13:S193
Autor:
J.D. Swales
Publikováno v:
British Journal of Anaesthesia. 56:677-688
We are still uncertain of the way in which environment and heredity interact to produce increased arterial pressure in patients with essential hypertension. Few indisputable abnormalities can be demonstrated. Of these there is universal agreement tha
Autor:
J.D. Swales
Publikováno v:
Hormone Research. 12:65-78
Whilst plasma renin values are elevated in a minority of patients with essential hypertension, there is no indication that high renin hypertension is a distinct entity and even where renin levels are elevated, they are usually less than those observe
Publikováno v:
The Lancet. 298:1181-1184
At least two separate processes give rise to renal hypertension—sodium retention and secretion of a renal pressor substance. Experimental evidence suggests that sodium retention plays no role in hypertension due to unilateral renal ischaemia with t
Autor:
J.D. Swales, K. Lewin
Publikováno v:
Gastroenterology. 50:211-223
Summary A survey was made of the clinical manifestations and postoperative course of 48 patients who had been subjected to total or partial colectomy, for "colitis," the inflammatory reaction of which manifested varying degrees of resemblance to Croh
Publikováno v:
The Lancet. 327:649-651
Sodium efflux was studied in leucocytes and resistance vessels from omental fat from 18 subjects undergoing laparotomy. The efflux of sodium was considerably faster from resistance vessels than from leucocytes, but there was a significant correlation