Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Thomas O. Murphy"'
Autor:
P. N. Sawyer, R. Adamson, K. Butt, J. Fitzgerald, S. Haque, J. Landi, L. Malik, F. Mistry, N. Ramasamy, K. Reddy, B. Stanczewski, D. Kirschenbaum, Wiley F. Barker, Neal R. Glass, Roger Hallin, Martin J. Kaplitt, Melvin M. Newman, Richard J. Sanders, John A. Kennedy, Robert A. McAlexander, Thomas O. Murphy, Robert S. Taylor, G. Melville Williams
Publikováno v:
Biomaterials, Medical Devices, and Artificial Organs. 8:345-367
Our experience with the NCGT graft has now encompassed 12 years in experimental animals and 4.5 years clinical experience with 134 grafts in man. It has previously been suggested that vessel wall structure, interface-charge, electric potential, and p
Publikováno v:
Radiology. 67:26-33
Since the initial work of Hoyer (1), in 1887, and the subsequent investigations of Sucquet (2), Schumaker (3), and others, it has been well demonstrated that there are normal, as well as abnormal, arteriovenous communications in man and in the lower
Publikováno v:
Angiology. 8:371-377
Publikováno v:
The American Journal of Surgery. 139:634-636
As discussed by Urschel [13], 50 to 70 percent of patients with symptoms of thoracic outlet syndrome may be treated conservatively by nonsurgical methods. Patients who still have symptoms after years of such therapy are referred to us for surgical tr
Publikováno v:
A.M.A. archives of surgery. 72(1)
An incompetent saphenous vein may be obliterated by various means. Retrograde injection with sclerosing solutions was originally believed to be a simple and hazardless procedure.1Boyd3has shown that radiopaque contrast medium with the sclerosing agen
Autor:
John Takamura, Thomas O. Murphy, John J. Bonica, Joseph F. Wilson, David N. Goodson, John J. Downes, Thomas Q. Ziegler
Publikováno v:
Anesthesiology. 22
Publikováno v:
Angiology. 10(1)
Publikováno v:
A.M.A. Archives of Surgery. 74:105
The reports of Buxton1and his colleagues on the interruption of the superficial femoral vein for long-standing deep phlebitis of the lower extremity, and the earlier phlebographic studies of Luke2and Bauer,3preceded an era of interest in interruption