8 вынікі
PPH occurs in approximately 1-5% of deliveries in the United States and accounts for 20-25% of maternal deaths worldwide. PPH is difficult to predict, but classically, risk factors for PPH- uterine atony, abruption, retained tissue, lacerations, infection, obesity, preeclampsia, magnesium
The perianal lesions (LAP) specific for Crohn's disease have been reported in 1938, six years after the first cases of luminal disease. If phenotypic data of the latter are well documented today, those of perianal disease remain inadequately described. The reasons are numerous: understated symptoms
1.1 Background (I)
1.1.1 10%~50% of the patients who previously underwent cholecystectomy experience recurrent abdominal pain with or without diarrhea, abdominal distention, enzymatic changes, etc., and sphincter of Oddi dysfunction (SOD) accounts for about 13% of such cases;
1.1.2 Sphincter of Oddi
Our primary outcome is to assess the safety of Dotarem in these patients up to 24 hours after Dotarem injection. The patients will be monitored in the hospital for at least 2 hours following the completion of the MRI exam. Many of these patients will have received sedation for the MRI and would be
Management of prolonged labor represents a challenging area in the daily obstetric practice. In 1993, Handa and Laros defined the arrest of active phase of labor, as failure of labor progress for 2 hours or more, and in 1994, WHO has proposed labor management partograph in which protraction is
If you are eligible to enroll in the study, you will be contacted by the principal investigator in person and he will describe the study in a private setting (neurosurgery clinic room or hospital patient room). You will be given ample opportunity to decide to participate or not.
You will be randomly
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common cutaneous malignancy. In the United States alone, the incidence of these tumors approaches or exceeds one million cases each year, and continues to increase. Actinic damage is the primary causal factor, and 85% of all lesions are located in
Background:
IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome) is a disorder of motility of the entire GI tract that produces cramping, abdominal pain, constipation, and/or diarrhea and sometimes passing of mucus in bowel movements. In most people with IBS, the GI tract is highly sensitive to many stimuli, including