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1 and increased neointima formation following arterial injury.
2 egulation target of mitogenic signals during arterial injury.
3 colocalized in neointimal macrophages after arterial injury.
4 ion is critical in neointima formation after arterial injury.
5 f intimal hyperplasia in response to femoral arterial injury.
6 esion formation in nonmouse animal models of arterial injury.
7 s, TF and active caspase-3 were absent after arterial injury.
8 ected from neointimal lesion formation after arterial injury.
9 e oxidase (Nox2)-deficient (Nox2-/-) mice to arterial injury.
10 n the formation of intimal hyperplasia after arterial injury.
11 pair and inhibited neointima formation after arterial injury.
12 let accumulation in FeCl3-induced mesenteric arterial injury.
13 VEGF with high affinity, in a mouse model of arterial injury.
14 and neointima formation in a mouse model of arterial injury.
15 in our understanding of the pathogenesis of arterial injury.
16 proliferation and neointimal formation after arterial injury.
17 ia of VSMC, we used a mouse model of femoral arterial injury.
18 n CRP-transgenic (CRPtg) mice to 2 models of arterial injury.
19 untoward neointimal expansion consequent to arterial injury.
20 tid thrombi were induced in swine (n = 7) by arterial injury.
21 eparin administration in the rabbit model of arterial injury.
22 of T lymphocytes on intimal thickening after arterial injury.
23 by a variety of agents and in vivo following arterial injury.
24 ntribute to the formation of neointima after arterial injury.
25 itment to sites of neointima formation after arterial injury.
26 icantly enhances intimal proliferation after arterial injury.
27 inflammatory responses of atherogenesis and arterial injury.
28 uates neointima formation after perivascular arterial injury.
29 tant determinant of thrombolysis at sites of arterial injury.
30 luation of a patient with suspected thoracic arterial injury.
31 inhibitor, prevents thrombus formation after arterial injury.
32 hat there are different response patterns to arterial injury.
33 te and cover the denuded area at the site of arterial injury.
34 are-stented coronary segments with regard to arterial injury.
35 rrant vascular repair processes in models of arterial injury.
36 n and luminal stenosis after balloon-induced arterial injury.
37 ing type and severity of angioplasty-induced arterial injury.
38 otoxicity and neointimal formation following arterial injury.
39 ng atherosclerotic plaque rupture or balloon arterial injury.
40 egulation of endothelial integrity following arterial injury.
41 lified the degree of arterial stenosis after arterial injury.
42 s, have a role in neointimal formation after arterial injury.
43 t role in smooth muscle cell migration after arterial injury.
44 n neointimal formation after balloon-induced arterial injury.
45 thought to mediate neointima formation after arterial injury.
46 s the response of the adventitia to coronary arterial injury.
47 ased thrombin deposition at the site of deep arterial injury.
48 are important for neointimal formation after arterial injury.
49 y, such as CD34(+)CXCR4(+)cells, at sites of arterial injury.
50 lial adhesion molecule in an animal model of arterial injury.
51 mits neointimal formation and stenosis after arterial injury.
52 cells enhances neointima formation following arterial injury.
53 PCs) participate in endothelial repair after arterial injury.
54 on and delays endothelial regeneration after arterial injury.
55 ase activity in atheromata and stent-induced arterial injury.
56 their preferential localization to sites of arterial injury.
57 ion, atherosclerosis, and EPC function after arterial injury.
58 ation as well as vessel remodeling following arterial injury.
59 ons, fractures, intracranial hemorrhage, and arterial injury.
60 ibition of neointimal hyperplasia induced by arterial injury.
61 52.2%, respectively) were at highest risk of arterial injury.
62 dependent predictors of an increased risk of arterial injury.
63 c deletion reduced intimal hyperplasia after arterial injury.
64 viewed all the CT angiograms for evidence of arterial injury.
65 itors, inhibits neointimal hyperplasia after arterial injury.
66 muscle cells (VSMCs) in atherosclerosis and arterial injury.
67 and increases neointima formation following arterial injury.
68 Rose Bengal administration and laser-induced arterial injury.
69 Cs) contribute to endothelial recovery after arterial injury.
70 smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation after arterial injury.
71 n the areas of regenerated endothelium after arterial injury.
72 osclerosis, and neointimal hyperplasia after arterial injury.
73 new questions in the management of thoracic arterial injuries.
74 m of findings that one would expect in renal arterial injuries.
76 eointimal hyperplasia after varying forms of arterial injury, 57 New Zealand White rabbits underwent
80 sis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) at the sites of arterial injury after balloon angioplasty, suppresses en
84 icantly decreased neointimal expansion after arterial injury and decreased smooth muscle cell prolife
87 expressed in the adventitia and neointima on arterial injury and found that it functionally increases
89 t1, mammalian Atr expression increased after arterial injury and in VSMCs stimulated with growth and
90 carotid thrombosis was low at low levels of arterial injury and increased along with the contributio
91 ZPI deficiency enhances thrombosis following arterial injury and increases mortality from pulmonary t
94 : protection from occlusive thrombosis after arterial injury and markedly diminished metastatic poten
95 rmines neointimal thickness independently of arterial injury and may be useful for predicting pattern
96 a pivotal role in neointima formation after arterial injury and might represent an attractive target
97 neointima formation by 94% (P<0.0001) after arterial injury and reduced the intima-to-media ratio co
98 ooth muscle cells (VSMCs) in vitro and after arterial injury and regulates both cell proliferation an
100 luminal size, whereas animal data show that arterial injury and stent design determine late neointim
101 les for PKCbeta in the SMC response to acute arterial injury and suggest that blockade of PKCbeta may
102 ity contributes to neointima formation after arterial injury and suggest that local delivery of a hig
104 it plays a role in neointima formation after arterial injury and that 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) modulat
105 PAI-1 might decrease lesion formation after arterial injury and that PAI-1 gene transfer might preve
106 rtant as platelets to thrombosis at sites of arterial injury and that platelets contribute to venous
107 nappreciated antithrombotic role at sites of arterial injury and that this activity may be mediated,
108 MCs express functional flt-1 receptors after arterial injury and that VEGF has synergistic effects wi
110 orrelations were found between the degree of arterial injury and the extent of the inflammatory react
115 dependent predictors of an increased risk of arterial injury and were used to construct a scoring sys
116 decreases lesions in a variety of models of arterial injury, and inhibition of NO synthase exacerbat
117 ly regulate cellular proliferation following arterial injury, and strategies to increase its expressi
118 ulation during the first 24 hours after deep arterial injury appears to be particularly effective for
122 Nineteen (32%) patients had the following arterial injuries at CT angiography: arterial occlusion
126 VN participate in the thrombotic response to arterial injury by preventing premature thrombus dissolu
127 gnaling may promote endothelial repair after arterial injury by selective recruitment and functional
128 t the inflammatory response after mechanical arterial injury correlates with the severity of neointim
129 immune system may differentially respond to arterial injury depending on the severity of injury, whi
130 rix degradation and cellular migration after arterial injury, does not appear to be so important in v
135 ical evidence on the role of microRNAs after arterial injury, focusing on practical aspects of their
137 an atypical cadherin induced robustly after arterial injury, has significant effects on mammalian va
139 its role in vascular repair after mechanical arterial injury (i.e., percutaneous transluminal coronar
141 rt greater risk for the development of iliac arterial injuries in patients undergoing transfemoral de
144 herosclerotic lesions on alloimmune-mediated arterial injury in an experimental setting is not known.
145 mation and inflammation after collar-induced arterial injury in ApoE(-/-) mice, and reduced cytokine
146 nd other vascular changes that develop after arterial injury in apolipoprotein E-deficient (apoE(-/-)
147 a model of accelerated atherosclerosis after arterial injury in apolipoprotein E-deficient (ApoE(-/-)
151 ling was characterized 4 weeks after femoral arterial injury in FLAP knockout mice and wild-type cont
152 of cell proliferation and inflammation after arterial injury in local vascular cells and that the SDF
153 CI, Kovacic et al. show that, in response to arterial injury in mice, the cytokine TNF-alpha triggers
155 reaction plays an equally important role as arterial injury in neointimal formation after coronary s
156 treatment suppresses the intimal response to arterial injury in nonatherosclerotic rodents and rabbit
157 oral and cellular immune responses can cause arterial injury in organ transplants, but the manifestat
160 ded thrombotic occlusion after FeCl3-induced arterial injury in vivo, an effect mediated through CXCR
163 the potential to support several pathways of arterial injury, including the release of reactive oxyge
164 arkedly accelerates thrombus formation after arterial injury, increases vascular oxidative stress, an
165 tained neointimal hyperplasia in response to arterial injury, indicating the in vivo role of R-ras as
169 neointimal formation after balloon and stent arterial injury is accompanied by subacute and late thro
170 Neointimal proliferation in response to arterial injury is an important contributor to restenosi
172 VSM), is markedly upregulated in response to arterial injury, is essential for normal VSM proliferati
173 hronic forms of limb ischemia and iatrogenic arterial injury, limiting the true assessment of ALI inc
174 hronic allograft dysfunction may result from arterial injury, manifest as transplant arteriosclerosis
175 ctin observed in the adventitial cells after arterial injury may constrict the injured vessel and con
176 nced endothelium regeneration after denuding arterial injury (mean [SEM] percent recovered area, wild
178 in mice and found that immediately following arterial injury, medial VSMCs upregulated Rantes in an a
181 f mutant mice by the ferric chloride-induced arterial injury model suggests that the Capn1-/- mice ar
185 able hypoperfusion: Protocol 1) or a site of arterial injury (model of recurrent platelet-mediated th
186 ith the histology of thrombi in large-animal arterial injury models and human acute coronary syndrome
188 gnant uterus, and in two different models of arterial injury, namely ballooning and ferric chloride i
190 tial imaging suggestive of a cerebrovascular arterial injury not classifiable by the Denver criteria.
192 ned in cholesterol-fed rabbits 4 weeks after arterial injury of the iliac artery (9 rabbits) and the
193 nine phosphokinase increase (four patients), arterial injury (one), neutropenia (one), and pneumoniti
196 endothelial cell proliferation 2 weeks after arterial injury (P<0.05), resulting in decreased neointi
198 nd recruitment and neointima formation after arterial injury, potentially through enhancement of plat
202 P-selectin or PSGL-1 blockade at the time of arterial injury significantly limits plaque macrophage c
205 d injury-induced vasoconstriction after deep arterial injury, suggesting that a major inhibition of p
206 ce compared with WT after chemically induced arterial injury, suggesting that CD36 may contribute to
207 proliferation and migration are responses to arterial injury that are highly important to the process
208 malities in rapidly proliferating SMCs after arterial injury that could contribute to the growth of a
209 e acute events transpiring immediately after arterial injury that establish the blueprint for this in
212 are protected from neointima formation after arterial injury through inhibition of monocyte trafficki
213 by initiating platelet adhesion at sites of arterial injury through interactions with the platelet r
214 upted and have used a mouse model of carotid arterial injury to compare the effects of estrogen on wi
215 The mice were then observed in a model of arterial injury to evaluate their capacity to form throm
217 e relative contributions of inflammation and arterial injury to neointimal formation in a porcine cor
219 s of mouse models, rather focus on models of arterial injuries, vein grafts, and transplant arteriosc
221 inally, neointima formation after mechanical arterial injury was increased in AMPKalpha2(-/-) but not
223 THODS AND Using a model of guidewire-induced arterial injury, we demonstrate decreased neointima form
226 g progenitor cells are recruited to sites of arterial injury where they may then differentiate into s
228 predictor of luminal loss in immune-mediated arterial injury, yet little is known about its mechanism
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