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1 t birth (cord blood) and in early childhood (venous blood).
2          Baseline anemia prevalence was 58% (venous blood).
3 , and their expression, in placenta and cord venous blood.
4 mparing their concentrations in arterial vs. venous blood.
5 , Th1, Th2, Th17, and Treg-memory cells from venous blood.
6  LAgP patients were isolated from peripheral venous blood.
7 s were vascularly isolated and perfused with venous blood.
8 and less H(+) release into the great cardiac venous blood.
9 tissues and cannot be sampled in superficial venous blood.
10  LAgP patients were isolated from peripheral venous blood.
11  consistently higher in the arterial than in venous blood.
12 on of radioactivity into superior mesenteric venous blood.
13 ormal subjects were isolated from peripheral venous blood.
14  venous blood flow and lungs without hepatic venous blood.
15 ased and lactate levels increased in patient venous blood.
16 centrations in arterial, portal, and hepatic venous blood.
17 ntrols were genotyped using genomic DNA from venous blood.
18                                              Venous blood (5 mL) was obtained from 104 subjects aged
19 entrations of glucose and oxygen relative to venous blood, a comprehensive biochemical characterizati
20 ge volume right lung activity, normalized to venous blood activity, is a good proxy for arterial bloo
21 1 that are specifically increased in hepatic venous blood after CBDL.
22 A receptor imaging were assessed by PET with venous blood analysis.
23 asma and four DBS cards from anti-coagulated venous blood and a fifth card from finger-prick blood we
24 rstly, platelets were isolated from systemic venous blood and activated with the GPVI specific agonis
25                                  Heparinized venous blood and bone marrow were collected from the pat
26 7%, P < 0.001) compared to DBS prepared from venous blood and handled similarly.
27  nm at basal conditions in both arterial and venous blood and is formed at a level of 0.5-2.5 mum upo
28 ucosal pH, and serum lactate levels of mixed venous blood and mesenteric venous blood were recorded a
29                                              Venous blood and nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal swabs were
30                                              Venous blood and oral rinse samples were obtained from f
31 n chamber was perfused with unanticoagulated venous blood and PDT evaluated using computerized morpho
32 ions declined rapidly after storage of fresh venous blood and that hypoxic vasodilation by banked RBC
33 , they are recalled, values are confirmed in venous blood and thyroxine replacement therapy (TRT) is
34                                              Venous blood and urine samples were collected at enrollm
35 A) directly diverts the splanchnic and renal venous blood assuring a good portal inflow to the graft.
36                        We sampled peripheral venous blood at 0, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, 72 and 168 hours po
37 s were vascularly isolated and perfused with venous blood at pulsatile pressures designed to simulate
38  partial pressure of O(2) (PO(2)) in cubital venous blood at rest, during handgrip exercise, and duri
39 port rat delivers constant pressure systemic venous blood at stable physiologic parameters to the ex
40 d calcium values of intraosseous and central venous blood at the baseline and during 5 mins of CPR wi
41 f radiotracer to the brain than arterialized venous blood, at least in some patient populations.
42                                 We collected venous blood before and after the intervention to measur
43 e and insulin concentrations in arterialized venous blood before and during FSIGT were virtually iden
44 ody fat metabolism, as validated by parallel venous blood beta-hydroxybutyrate (BOHB) measurements.
45                     Intraosseous and central venous blood biochemical and hemoglobin values were simi
46                                          The venous blood BK1-5:bradykinin ratio correlated with plas
47 13-ketooctadecadienoic acid (KODE)] into the venous blood both in vivo and during perfusion.
48 tion is a rare condition in which splanchnic venous blood bypasses the liver draining directly into s
49 , it appears that increases in the tissue or venous blood CO(2) concentration are neither sensitive n
50 upport the notion that changes in tissue and venous blood CO(2) concentration during dysoxia reflect
51 hypoxia (dysoxia) to increases in tissue and venous blood CO(2) concentration.
52 collected by finger-prick was noninferior to venous blood collected in PAXgene tubes.
53                                   Samples of venous blood, collected at various time points, were ana
54  utility for applications in the field where venous blood collection and timely shipment of labile bl
55 ith AD showed a significant narrowing of the venous blood column diameter (131.7 +/- 10.8 microm) com
56  correlated with the percentage decreases in venous blood column diameter (P = 0.031, R(2) = 0.51).
57 hat leads to it receiving all the mesenteric venous blood, combined with its unique micro anatomy, al
58 e primary outcome was within-person GLP-1 in venous blood (concentrations and area under the curve).
59                                       Use of venous blood data introduced a large bias in VT (r(2) =
60 cted genomic DNA (gDNA) as an alternative to venous blood-derived gDNA from premature neonates for mo
61 were unable to cooperate with fingerstick or venous blood draw.
62         Plasma was collected from infants if venous blood draws were ordered by pediatricians.
63 n which inspiration-induced downward flow of venous blood due to reduced intrathoracic pressure is co
64 e acid-base status of intraosseous and mixed venous blood during cardiopulmonary resuscitation; and c
65 x gene Prox1 is necessary and sufficient for venous blood endothelial cells (BECs) to acquire a lymph
66 the number of neutrophils was greater in the venous blood entering the lungs than in the arterial blo
67 evelop PAVM compared with lungs with hepatic venous blood flow (12/12 and 3/16 respectively, p < 0.01
68  arterial blood flow (F(a)), absolute portal venous blood flow (F(p)), absolute total liver blood flo
69                         Enhancing the portal venous blood flow (PVBF) has been shown to reduce portal
70 a significant improvement in post-LPS portal venous blood flow (PVBF, 79% of baseline vs. 45% of base
71 acquisitions, one optimized for arterial and venous blood flow (velocity encoding range, +/-50 cm/sec
72 t echocardiograms between lungs with hepatic venous blood flow and lungs without hepatic venous blood
73  the portal vein, and disturbances in portal venous blood flow could contribute to the formation of b
74                Concomitant analysis of brain venous blood flow indicated that CSF and venous flux act
75  the differential assessment of arterial and venous blood flow patterns in the retina that may facili
76 crom, P = 0.01), and a significantly reduced venous blood flow rate (9.7 +/- 3.1 microL/min) compared
77                             Change in portal venous blood flow rates did not have an effect on the si
78                                 Liver portal venous blood flow was assessed during perfusion, and at
79                        Lungs with no hepatic venous blood flow were more likely to develop PAVM compa
80 venous stasis, reduces intraoperative portal venous blood flow, decreases intraoperative urinary outp
81 tic IRI model, adjunctive BV improved portal venous blood flow, increased bile production, and decrea
82 HO-1 (Ad-HO-1) significantly improved portal venous blood flow, increased bile production, and decrea
83 mitant analyses of CSF dynamics and cerebral venous blood flow, that is, in epidural veins at cervica
84                                          For venous blood flow, the ICC with Bayesian multipoint MR i
85 n lesions is unaffected by changes in portal venous blood flow.
86 t inverse relationship to the rate of portal venous blood flow.
87 ps showed significant restoration of retinal venous blood flow.
88 ath, there was a large resurgence of femoral venous blood flow.
89 rtial pressure of a given inert gas in mixed-venous blood flowing back to the lungs is calculated fro
90                                    Obtaining venous blood for serological screening, typically perfor
91  multibed scanning over 4 h with sampling of venous bloods for radioactivity and radioactive metaboli
92                                              Venous blood from 72 Schistosoma haematobium-exposed par
93                                              Venous blood from diabetic patients was exposed to air t
94                                              Venous blood from healthy volunteers was tonometered to
95 ve immunoselection from the PBMC fraction of venous blood from healthy volunteers, and monocyte-deriv
96 dGuo in the DNA of lymphocytes isolated from venous blood from healthy young male volunteers in sever
97                                              Venous blood from human volunteers was stimulated with L
98    It is feasible and safe to collect portal venous blood from patients undergoing EUS.
99               MPs were prepared from ECs and venous blood from patients with ACS (n=30) and from heal
100                                              Venous blood from seven of the subjects was sampled for
101 ormed and corresponding arterial and central venous blood gas and lactate measurements were made.
102    Hemodynamic variables, systemic and mixed venous blood gas tensions and oxygenation, arterial lact
103                                 Arterial and venous blood gas values, glucose, and cardiac output wer
104 th ITPR-CPR for 15 minutes, and arterial and venous blood gases were collected at baseline and minute
105                                     Cerebral venous blood gases were drawn from a jugular bulb venous
106                            Arterial and deep venous blood gases were measured and oxygen consumption
107                           Arterial and mixed venous blood gases were measured at baseline, 1 min afte
108                    Radial artery and femoral venous blood gases were measured.
109 leg blood flow and radial artery and femoral venous blood gases were measured.
110  the first minute of CPR, arterial and mixed venous blood gases were superior in the 3 experimental g
111                                 Arterial and venous blood gases, hemodynamics, and pulmonary mechanic
112 ge-pressure monitoring, measurement of mixed venous blood gases, or monitoring of cardiac output by o
113 nted for measurement of arterial and central venous blood gases.
114  and blood flow were measured with pulmonary venous blood gases.
115 rdiac output by thermodilution, arterial and venous blood gases; electrolytes; lactate; base excess;
116 sions by comparing the CGM glucose values to venous blood glucose measurements taken every 15 min.
117    All 12 lungs with no perfusion of hepatic venous blood had positive contrast echocardiographic stu
118   As expected, ACZ led to lower arterial and venous blood [HCO3-], pH and lactate levels (P < 0.05),
119 lse-positive heel-stick screening but normal venous blood hormone levels; (b) hypoplasia-ectopia in 3
120 lood [PVB]) and outflow compartment (hepatic venous blood [HVB]) of a training (n = 55) and validatio
121 ual parasites in: i) finger prick blood, ii) venous blood, iii) skin biopsies, and in pools of mosqui
122  near normal because of sequestered cerebral venous blood in capillaries and venous capacitance vesse
123 n of circulating tumor cells from peripheral venous blood in clinical practice.
124  of circulating tumor cells using peripheral venous blood in clinical practice.
125                 Arterial blood (arterialized venous blood in healthy subjects) was collected for the
126 In CAS patients, glutamate concentrations in venous blood increased immediately after the procedure (
127 vels of inflammatory cytokines in the portal venous blood, induced activation of resident liver dendr
128  be a nonspecific feature of impaired portal venous blood inflow, whatever the cause, or a feature of
129                                              Venous blood ionized calcium was used as an index of int
130 ral blood (PPB) and intraoperative pulmonary venous blood (IPVB) could predict poor long-term surviva
131 Leukocytes were separated from the patient's venous blood, labeled with (18)F-FDG, and reinjected int
132 Here we describe and evaluate the changes in venous blood lead level (VBLL) associated with DMSA trea
133 9% to 74.0%) for identifying children with a venous blood lead level greater than 10 mug/dL (5 studie
134 ation was increased by approximately 7.5% in venous blood leaving the CNS capillary bed compared to a
135 hen feeding directly on the skin compared to venous blood (odds ratio 2.01; 95% CI 1.21 - 3.33, p = 0
136  from a primary tumor can be detected in the venous blood of cancer patients.
137                                        Human venous blood of different concentrations, various fluids
138 ry in concentration between the arterial and venous blood of human patients.
139                 RNA was extracted from fresh venous blood or paraffin-embedded myocardial tissue of t
140 , and in pools of mosquitoes that fed iv) on venous blood or, v) directly on skin.
141                       The reduction in mixed venous blood oxygen saturation and the increase in blood
142          Post-occlusive transient changes in venous blood oxygenation might provide a new measure of
143  between samples collected from capillary or venous blood (p = 0.547).
144 differential equation to calculate the mixed-venous blood partial pressure may be in error.
145 ovolemic conditions, especially when central venous blood pressure is critically low.
146 ternative explanations, like measurements of venous blood pressure, did not show correlation with hyd
147                   Their arterial and central venous blood pressures were continuously monitored by in
148            Arterial blood flow, arterial and venous blood pressures, total vascular resistance, tissu
149  in arterial, hepatic venous (HV) and portal venous blood (PV).
150  were detected in the hepatic inflow (portal venous blood [PVB]) and outflow compartment (hepatic ven
151 ion ratios and taking into account pulmonary venous blood remixing yielded our lung-scale model.
152            Right lung activity, corrected to venous blood, represents the whole arterial blood curve
153 field units) of the systemic blood and renal venous blood, respectively, and CT(PRE) is the precontra
154  inferior vena cava and allows uninterrupted venous blood return during the anhepatic phase.
155 dequate forward blood flow out of the heart, venous blood return must be drawn back into the heart.
156 tion with inflammatory markers measured in a venous blood sample at the time of cognitive testing.
157 urements of known serum radioactivity from a venous blood sample obtained at the time of PET/CT.
158                                            A venous blood sample was collected and blood pressure was
159                                            A venous blood sample was taken at baseline and at 6 and 1
160  A sample of unstimulated whole saliva and a venous blood sample were obtained from each subject, and
161 ent of B-type natriuretic peptide level from venous blood sample were performed in 150 consecutive pa
162 er laboratory indicators, were measured in a venous blood sample.
163                                              Venous blood samples (0 h predose through 28 h after dos
164                       CMRGlu quantified with venous blood samples (n = 6) showed excellent agreement
165 ompare pH and Pco2 of intraosseous and mixed venous blood samples after sequential infusions of fluid
166 O2 max , direct Fick by femoral arterial and venous blood samples and Doppler ultrasound blood flow m
167 d at peak exercise from femoral arterial and venous blood samples and leg blood flow (by thermodiluti
168                         Femoral arterial and venous blood samples and muscle biopsy samples were coll
169                                              Venous blood samples and urine were collected for pharma
170 etics were derived from femoral arterial and venous blood samples and vastus lateralis muscle biopsie
171                                              Venous blood samples and vastus lateralis muscle biopsy
172      In addition, IDIF results obtained with venous blood samples and with a transformed venous-to-ar
173                                   Peripheral venous blood samples at 24 and 72 hrs after the onset of
174                                              Venous blood samples can be used for absolute quantifica
175 le angina pectoris undergoing PCI had serial venous blood samples drawn before PCI, after PCI, and at
176 cs were determined from femoral arterial and venous blood samples during a primed-constant d5-phenyla
177 mples to quantify S. japonicum infection and venous blood samples for hemograms and measures of iron
178  provided stools to quantify reinfection and venous blood samples for hemograms and measures of iron
179 ood samples could serve as an alternative to venous blood samples for the diagnosis of EVD in resourc
180 vels were measured in adrenal and peripheral venous blood samples from 2 patients.
181 H and PB NK cells in paired liver biopsy and venous blood samples from 70 patients with chronic HCV i
182                                              Venous blood samples from healthy volunteers were expose
183                       We obtained peripheral venous blood samples in 23 subjects with NNV-ARMD or tre
184                                              Venous blood samples obtained before scanning were expos
185 ably frozen mononuclear cells separated from venous blood samples obtained from 111 infants born to H
186                                              Venous blood samples of 20 healthy volunteers were expos
187 moglobin concentration (Hb) in capillary and venous blood samples of HIV-negative and HIV-positive su
188  corticotropin levels were higher in adrenal venous blood samples than in peripheral venous samples,
189 ance between measurements of fingerprick and venous blood samples using the standard hematology analy
190                                   Concurrent venous blood samples were acquired for blood metabolite
191                                   Peripheral venous blood samples were analyzed including assessments
192                        Peripheral and portal venous blood samples were assayed for midazolam and [15N
193                                              Venous blood samples were collected and assayed to exami
194 oth protocols, arterial and internal jugular venous blood samples were collected at rest and coupled
195                                              Venous blood samples were collected at weeks 0, 4, and 8
196                                Additionally, venous blood samples were collected before (18)F-FLT inj
197                                              Venous blood samples were collected before blue dye infu
198              Dynamic scans were acquired and venous blood samples were collected during the (18)F-FLT
199                                       Fasted venous blood samples were collected for iron isotopic an
200                                              Venous blood samples were collected from 44 patients wit
201 s on TLR expression and function, peripheral venous blood samples were collected from healthy volunte
202 y on TLR expression and function, peripheral venous blood samples were collected from healthy volunte
203                                              Venous blood samples were collected from healthy, premen
204                                              Venous blood samples were collected from the extracorpor
205                                              Venous blood samples were drawn for thrombelastograpy (T
206                                       Serial venous blood samples were drawn from 1 to 240 min after
207                                              Venous blood samples were drawn from healthy, exclusivel
208                                       Serial venous blood samples were drawn over an 11-h period (8:3
209                                       Serial venous blood samples were drawn to assess concentrations
210 nical range from fingerprick (capillary) and venous blood samples were measured and compared using a
211 rization before and after the procedure, and venous blood samples were obtained 24, 48, and 72 hours
212                         Arterial and hepatic venous blood samples were obtained after an overnight fa
213                                              Venous blood samples were obtained at 8 time points over
214                                       Serial venous blood samples were obtained for radioactivity mea
215                                     Methods: Venous blood samples were obtained from 48 patients subj
216                                              Venous blood samples were obtained from all participants
217                                              Venous blood samples were obtained.
218                                              Venous blood samples were taken at 0, 15, 30, 60, and 12
219                                              Venous blood samples were taken at 55 and 85 min after i
220                                              Venous blood samples were taken immediately after each b
221                  Anthropometric measures and venous blood samples were taken monthly.
222                                              Venous blood samples, taken from volunteers were culture
223                                Using 2 mixed venous blood samples, the method accurately assesses the
224 ers of endothelial function were measured on venous blood samples.
225  inflammatory marker levels were measured in venous blood samples.
226                   Hematology was analyzed in venous blood samples.
227               Patients and controls provided venous blood samples.
228 th imaging-derived input function (IDIF) and venous blood samples.
229 ntial muscle biopsies, and femoral arterial, venous blood sampling allowed determination of glucose a
230 0, and 240 min postingestion with additional venous blood sampling at 5, 10, 15, and 30 min postinges
231 ated these at the 6-year follow-up alongside venous blood sampling for measurement of glucocerebrosid
232             PET acquisitions (10-20 min) and venous blood sampling were performed every 30-60 min thr
233              SPECT acquisitions (30 min) and venous blood sampling were performed every 60 min throug
234  30-min dynamic (18)F-FDHT PET/CT scans with venous blood sampling were performed in 14 patients.
235 ontinuous arterial and discrete arterial and venous blood sampling were performed to determine a plas
236                         Arterial and femoral venous blood sampling, thermodilution blood flow measure
237 es were obtained with concurrent arterial or venous blood sampling.
238 often used as a less invasive alternative to venous blood sampling.
239 ment with constant infusion of (18)F-FDG and venous blood sampling.
240    Thirteen of these patients also underwent venous blood sampling.
241 90- to 140-min interval after injection with venous blood sampling.
242                                 On day 20, a venous blood specimen tested negative for Ebola virus by
243  examination, structured clinical interview, venous blood specimens, and masked grading of seven stan
244  0.0004) 55.2% +/- 22.5% increase in retinal venous blood speed accompanied the decreases in diameter
245 h, nitrite levels are higher in arterial vs. venous blood (suggesting systemic nitrite consumption),
246 CC xenografts that receive both arterial and venous blood supplies.
247 with clearance of CNS-derived Abeta into the venous blood supply with no increase from a peripheral c
248 umferential purple discolouration indicating venous blood supply, with heaping up of the mucosa invol
249 ed cell NO with appreciably higher values in venous blood than arterial blood.
250 lood that delivers nutrients to tissues, and venous blood that removes the metabolic by-products.
251                                     Based on venous blood, the analysis used mean corpuscular volume
252 heoretical hepatotrophic molecules in portal venous blood (Theme I) and with the contemporaneous para
253 omic right-to-left shunts, allowing systemic venous blood to bypass gas exchange and pulmonary capill
254 us malformations (PAVMs) that allow systemic venous blood to bypass the pulmonary capillary bed throu
255  continually exposed, via gut-derived portal venous blood, to potential antigens and bacterial produc
256                                    Stasis of venous blood triggers deep vein thrombosis by activating
257             Clonogenic MSCs were detected in venous blood up to 1 hour after infusion in 13 of 21 pat
258 st 28 days post-treatment when fed patients' venous blood using membrane feeding assays.
259                   Increasing perfusion using venous blood (VB) would be an attractive option because
260 of factors control the ratio of arterial and venous blood vessel types during angiogenesis.
261 d for the proper development of arterial and venous blood vessels, and that a major role of Notch sig
262  topographic relationship of overt damage to venous blood vessels.
263  femoral arterial and venous, and peripheral venous blood vessels.
264 he feasibility and safety of sampling portal venous blood via endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) to count po
265            A 3-mm skin snip biopsy (PKDL) or venous blood (VL) was processed by quantitative PCR.
266 ,O2) due to the influence of the intervening venous blood volume and the contribution of body O2 stor
267                     LV(EV), distal pulmonary venous blood volume for vessels smaller than 5 mm(2) in
268                                              Venous blood was also collected and centrifuged to obtai
269                            In addition, 2 mL venous blood was collected by venipuncture from all part
270 t baseline and at the end of NEFA elevation; venous blood was collected for measurement of lipids and
271                                              Venous blood was collected for measurements of plasma ca
272                                              Venous blood was collected from 13 patients with CP desp
273 g (month 0) and end (month 10) of the study, venous blood was collected from family members >18 years
274                                              Venous blood was collected from normal subjects and peri
275                             Internal jugular venous blood was drawn from both left and right sides an
276                                              Venous blood was drawn to compare protein binding, paren
277                                              Venous blood was measured for hemoglobin (Hb).
278                                        Fresh venous blood was obtained and stained with monoclonal an
279 placebo or inhaled enoxaparin (2 mg/kg), and venous blood was obtained for analysis of plasma antifac
280                 During coronary angioplasty, venous blood was obtained for flow cytometric detection
281                                              Venous blood was obtained from healthy male lowlanders (
282                                              Venous blood was obtained from the rabbits before and af
283                                              Venous blood was sampled before and after the exposure a
284                                 Arterialized venous blood was sampled for 2 h, and measured meal GI a
285                         Arterial and hepatic venous blood was sampled in postabsorptive (n = 6; study
286                                 Arterialized venous blood was sampled throughout the 2-h postchalleng
287                 At the end of each CWR test, venous blood was sampled to determine [Lac](blood).
288                                              Venous blood was sampled to measure N-terminal (NT)-proA
289 nously; arterial, portal venous, and hepatic venous blood was sampled; and liver and visceral fat wer
290 duration of labeled MSCs in the circulation, venous blood was serially drawn from five additional rat
291                                    Six ml of venous blood was taken for the measurement of serum uric
292 ision and accuracy of the method with use of venous blood were also tested.
293 ples and placental tissue and umbilical cord venous blood were collected and analyzed for choline and
294 blood activity measurement, small samples of venous blood were collected at various time points after
295 a quality of life (AQLQ) questionnaires, and venous blood were collected during both visits.
296  levels of mixed venous blood and mesenteric venous blood were recorded at baseline, after pericardia
297                                 Arterial and venous blood were sampled frequently using a peristaltic
298 rprick samples accurately reflect those from venous blood, which confirms the potential of capillary
299  relative change in volume for arteriole vs. venous blood within primary vibrissa cortex of awake, he
300 on of spillover between arterial and hepatic venous blood without portal venous data.

 
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