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1 ents with 39 MDCT masses (22 thrombus and 17 pannus).
2 ute, organizing, and organized thrombus (ie, pannus).
3 ion tissue with early fibrous encapsulation (pannus).
4 le patient showed a subepithelial, avascular pannus.
5 ns the aggressive phenotype of the advancing pannus.
6 he rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovial tissue pannus.
7 l blood and accumulated in inflamed synovial pannus.
8 ected as tissue overgrowth was classified as pannus.
9 e suppression of the angiogenic component of pannus.
10 ght play a role in neovascularization of the pannus.
11 while FLIP remained highly expressed in the pannus.
12 ue and to the growth and proliferation of RA pannus.
13 ation found in the rheumatoid arthritic (RA) pannus.
14 r the chondrocytic cells found in rheumatoid pannus.
15 res of vascularity, villous hypertrophy, and pannus.
16 expanding inflammatory tissue referred to as pannus.
20 clinical evidence of trachomatous scarring, pannus and Herbert's pits (HPs) or limbal follilcles in
21 Although immune cells, which infiltrate the pannus and promote inflammation, play a prominent role i
22 l and subclinical inflammation, formation of pannus and synovial hyperplasia, and the erosion of cart
23 synovitis characterized by the formation of pannus and the destruction of cartilage and bone in the
25 tomography (MDCT) in distinguishing between pannus and thrombus, the latter amenable to thrombolysis
28 y, resulting in a dense vascularized corneal pannus, and eventually leading to visual impairment.
29 clinical evidence of trachomatous scarring, pannus, and Herbert's pits (HPs) or limbal follicles in
30 ich contributes to the formation of invasive pannus, and in neutrophil survival, which affects inflam
31 ation; failed: recurrent epithelial defects, pannus, and inflammation), phenotype of cells covering t
32 gnificant reduction in synovial hyperplasia, pannus, angiogenesis, inflammatory infiltration, bone an
35 e consistent across groups, while scores for pannus, calcification, and structural change increased o
36 nts showed that C3 deposition, inflammation, pannus, cartilage, and bone damage scores were all signi
40 ectively reduced paw inflammation, inhibited pannus development and mitigated bone degradation compar
42 g cells and fibroblast-like cells within the pannus expressed both PTHrP and the PTH/PTHrP receptor,
43 nts in TSG-6-treated animals revealed little pannus formation and cartilage erosion, features which w
45 parameters that differentiate thrombus from pannus formation as the etiology of obstructed mechanica
47 in the rampant fibroblast proliferation and pannus formation characteristic of rheumatoid arthritis.
48 ical prosthetic valve can help differentiate pannus formation from thrombus and may therefore be of v
51 rophy and hyperplasia, and highly aggressive pannus formation with erosion of the articular cartilage
53 reduced the inflammatory cell infiltration, pannus formation, and bone and cartilage degradation.
56 e, inflammatory cell infiltration, fibrosis, pannus formation, and bone erosion in joints of BLT1/BLT
57 mmatory cell infiltration, cartilage damage, pannus formation, and bone erosion in the joints of CIA
59 ease characterized by synovial inflammation, pannus formation, and progressive joint destruction.
60 and bone erosions, synovial hyperplasia, and pannus formation, and reduced numbers of vessels (angiog
62 ptosis, proinflammatory cytokine expression, pannus formation, bone erosion, joint swelling, and pain
63 eases in the inflammatory cell infiltration, pannus formation, cartilage and bone destruction, and th
66 -induced arthritis (CIA) is characterized by pannus formation, cell infiltration, and cartilage erosi
68 eficient mice revealed synovial hyperplasia, pannus formation, mononuclear cell infiltration, bone er
75 Features of vascularity, villous formation, pannus, granularity, and capillary hyperemia were record
79 The cause of mechanical AVR obstruction was pannus in 26 cases (53%), mismatch (P-PM) in 19 (39%) an
81 4 main phenomena: 1) thrombosis; 2) fibrotic pannus ingrowth; 3) degeneration; and 4) endocarditis.
84 d arthritis (RA) is invasion of the synovial pannus into cartilage, and this process requires degrada
87 ike synoviocyte (FLS), has a central role in pannus invasion and destruction of cartilage and bone in
88 tilage may be one of the factors that impede pannus invasion following an inflammatory insult to the
93 damage at sites adjacent to and distal from pannus invasion, and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase
94 rophils, destruction of articular cartilage, pannus invasion, bone resorption, extra-articular fibrop
99 ive to new blood vessel formation, and hence pannus mass, adding to other therapeutic effects of anti
102 n the pathogenic processes that arise in the pannus of rheumatoid arthritis and also interfere with c
103 ntation, pump surfaces become covered with a pannus of smooth muscle-like cells (myofibroblasts).
106 iography in detecting the obstruction cause (pannus or thrombus), bioprosthesis calcifications, and e
107 rosion, bone erosion, and fibroproliferative pannus) or frozen, cryosectioned, and assayed for enzyme
111 function, Prosthetic Heart Valve Thrombosis, Pannus, Paravalvular Leak, CT Angiography, Cardiac, Valv
113 age of origin of the entire conjunctivalized pannus removed from eight corneas with a diagnosis of to
115 er of neutrophils in the synovial lining and pannus significantly decreased from day 28 to day 35, su
117 thelial outgrowth from segments of five such pannus specimens were analyzed by Western blot and rever
121 f extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins in the pannus suggest that intracellular signals generated thro
123 ce studies showed that, aside from the joint pannus, the subchondral bone tissue constitutes an essen
126 The resultant epithelial phenotype of the pannus tissue was not corneal, as evidenced by the negat
127 mity to MNCs, and in occasional cells within pannus tissue, but not in the MNCs in bone resorption la
129 e 6 historical controls that developed LSCD, pannus was noted in 1 (13%) and pseudopterygium extendin
130 sion and localization of MT1-MMP in human RA pannus were investigated by Western blot analysis of pri
132 ke expansion of inflamed synovial tissue, or pannus, which causes much of the joint damage in this di
133 for example, underlies the formation of the pannus, while proliferation of endothelial cells results
134 ignificant findings included the presence of pannus without inflammatory changes in the regions in wh