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1 maged units to surviving normal units (e.g., pneumonectomy).
2 sels 5 weeks after MCT injury (4 weeks after pneumonectomy).
3 ng adult alveolar regrowth following partial pneumonectomy.
4 who had previous contralateral lobectomy or pneumonectomy.
5 ed T2N0 NSCLC and had undergone lobectomy or pneumonectomy.
6 perioperative complications of extrapleural pneumonectomy.
7 cute lung injury, as do large breaths during pneumonectomy.
8 e, complete resection, pathologic stage, and pneumonectomy.
9 cted with MCT (60 mg/kg) on Day 7 after left pneumonectomy.
10 arteries obtained at transplant surgery and pneumonectomy.
11 cted with MCT (60 mg/kg) on Day 7 after left pneumonectomy.
12 monary artery blood flow after contralateral pneumonectomy.
13 onary artery anastomosis was substituted for pneumonectomy.
14 leurectomy and decortication or extrapleural pneumonectomy.
16 greater than 5 percent for esophagectomy and pneumonectomy, 2 to 5 percent for gastrectomy, cystectom
17 ents underwent lobectomy, 1 (3.2%) underwent pneumonectomy, 5 (16.1%) underwent sleeve lobectomy, and
19 ial issues, such as the role of extrapleural pneumonectomy, adjuvant radiotherapy, and use of intensi
21 hemotherapy in combination with extrapleural pneumonectomy - an emerging therapeutic option in the tr
28 , cystectomy, esophagectomy, pancreatectomy, pneumonectomy, and liver resection) between 1993 and 200
29 ulmonary artery remodeling in these MCT plus pneumonectomy animals was compared with animals receivin
30 95% CI, 1.04-1.51; P = .02), and receipt of pneumonectomy (aOR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.02-1.80; P = .04).
32 efusal of surgery or RT, n = 5; extrapleural pneumonectomy at time of surgery, n = 2; or chemotherapy
33 that received monocrotaline and/or underwent pneumonectomy but did not undergo aortocaval fistula, th
34 e, complete resection, pathologic stage, and pneumonectomy, but not induction regimen, significantly
35 ic mortality was substantially higher in the pneumonectomy cohort for both date of surgery and 1-year
37 timal lesions resulted from injury plus post-pneumonectomy compensatory lung growth, rather than inju
38 n was administered, followed by extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP) and hemithoracic radiation (RT), to
39 iew our 24-year experience with extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP) in the treatment of epithelioid mali
41 he world's leading proponent of extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP), an operation in which all the pleur
42 mplex cancer surgeries (pulmonary lobectomy, pneumonectomy, esophagectomy, gastrectomy, and colectomy
43 ompared to lobectomy, excess mortality after pneumonectomy extends beyond 1 year and is driven primar
44 tic resonance imaging underwent extrapleural pneumonectomy followed by combination chemotherapy and r
45 week-old, male, C57BL/6J mice underwent left pneumonectomy, followed by post-operative and daily intr
52 tric patients <21 years of age who underwent pneumonectomy from 1990 to 2017 for primary or metastati
53 A 33-year-old woman underwent a right-sided pneumonectomy in 1995 for treatment of a lung adenocarci
55 KGF enhances compensatory lung growth after pneumonectomy in adult rats as indicated by increased LW
61 el, that compensatory lung growth after left pneumonectomy is inhibited by heparin administration.
63 the 180 patients who underwent lobectomy or pneumonectomy led to the elimination of sex and age, whi
65 s in lung regeneration, we used a unilateral pneumonectomy model that promotes the formation of new a
66 34 months +/- 67 (standard deviation) after pneumonectomy; multiple CT scans were obtained in 58 pat
70 carotid endarterectomy (CEA), lung lobectomy/pneumonectomy, open and laparoscopic cholecystectomy, pa
77 d trials are well under way for extrapleural pneumonectomy plus intraoperative intracavitary hyperthe
79 lt lung regeneration, we employ a unilateral pneumonectomy (PNX) model that promotes regenerative alv
81 pment and for compensatory lung growth after pneumonectomy (PNX), but the mechanisms by which strain
82 els in vigorously growing canine lungs after pneumonectomy (PNX), suggesting a role for paracrine EPO
83 primary or multifocal, second primary after pneumonectomy, proximal to or involved with mediastinal
86 ection of the tumor (usually by lobectomy or pneumonectomy), the patients were randomly assigned to r
88 atectomy time (dHT), without affecting donor pneumonectomy time (dPT), and influenced LiT and lung tr
89 awley rats was followed 1 week later by left pneumonectomy to increase blood flow to the right lung.
93 or patients who underwent lobectomy, but not pneumonectomy, versus chemotherapy plus radiotherapy.
94 imulates lung regeneration following partial pneumonectomy via direct transcriptional regulation of g
95 overall complications were similar (46% for pneumonectomy vs 43% for lobectomy; P = 0.40), but rates
97 ne 3% or propofol 8 to 10 mg/kg per hr until pneumonectomy was done; then propofol was used for all a
98 s were deemed ineligible if an unanticipated pneumonectomy was indicated, or if air leakage occurred
101 oup P, sham thoracotomy in group S, and left pneumonectomy with administration of KGF (6.25 mg/week,
102 t options is the combination of extrapleural pneumonectomy with intraoperative intracavitary hyperthe
104 y and characterize long-term consequences of pneumonectomy, with particular attention to nononcologic