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1 bus detection (p = 0.13 vs. patients without thrombus).
2 erent modelling scenarios (e.g. with/without thrombus).
3 astography probably corresponds with chronic thrombus.
4 d complement iC3b and C5b-9 in a human brain thrombus.
5 tion fraction to up to 3 patients without LV thrombus.
6 ld be administered to dissolve the occluding thrombus.
7 n (P = .008) independently helped predict LV thrombus.
8 rove accurate assessment of the exact age of thrombus.
9 t in mice with a thrombus vs those without a thrombus.
10 mic stroke and patients with an intracardiac thrombus.
11 tion of interactions between platelets and a thrombus.
12 for simulating the formation and growth of a thrombus.
13  model which simulates the initiation of the thrombus.
14 ng in platelets and is required for a stable thrombus.
15 fied atherosclerotic plaque and intraluminal thrombus.
16 modality imaging ruled out the presence of a thrombus.
17 ch sufficiently reduced TPA flux through the thrombus.
18 19 pneumonia even in the absence of arterial thrombus.
19 on, noninducibility or left atrial appendage thrombus.
20 d by a reduction of leukocyte content in the thrombus.
21 tact to collagen fibers at the bottom of the thrombus.
22          For predicting the occurrence of LV thrombus, a multiple regression model was applied.
23 , microsurgery, targeted drug/cell delivery, thrombus ablation, and wound healing are reviewed from t
24              In aortic aneurysmal disease, a thrombus adherent to the aortic wall within the expandin
25 ictating the deformation and remodeling of a thrombus after its formation in hemostasis.
26 ormation for the diagnosis and therapy of LV thrombus after STEMI.
27 ERIAL/The object of this study was to assess thrombus age in patients with saphenous vein insufficien
28 lasminogen, and alpha2AP, which changed with thrombus age.
29 ist released by platelets was limited to the thrombus and a boundary layer downstream, thus restricti
30  from both knockout mice, collagen-dependent thrombus and fibrin formation under flow were enhanced.
31 acomechanical thrombolysis") rapidly removes thrombus and is hypothesized to reduce the risk of the p
32 ufficient to balance drag forces on an early thrombus and keep it intact.
33 were analyzed (maximal diameter and surface, thrombus and lumen volumes, maximal wall pressure, and w
34 ith annualized rates of 3.7% and 0.8% for LV thrombus and matched non-LV thrombus patients, respectiv
35  activation leads to the formation of a firm thrombus and thus the sealing of a damaged blood vessel.
36 lial matrix, by fibrin and fibrinogen in the thrombus, and by a remarkable number of other ligands.
37 eplacement (TTVR), including valve function, thrombus, and endocarditis.
38 s implanted, less multivessel stenting, less thrombus, and less no-reflow.
39 e interval [CI]: 79%, 100%) had at least one thrombus, and only 69% of control patients (95% CI: 50%,
40 d device position, absence of device-related thrombus, and peridevice leak of <=5 mm.
41 enic thrombus, whereas mixed echogenicity of thrombus appeared on 11 patients.
42 oons is part of the haemostatic response and thrombus architecture.
43 , conduction abnormalities, and intracardiac thrombus are common in patients with cardiac amyloidosis
44 e while deformations throughout the wall and thrombus are inferred from optical coherence tomography.
45 ctions between flowing and coagulated blood (thrombus) are crucial in dictating the deformation and r
46 3 to 5.26; p = 0.002) and a smaller baseline thrombus area (HR: 0.66; 95% CI: 0.45 to 0.96; p = 0.031
47 probe (p = 0.047) and a smaller nonenhancing thrombus area compared to intact AAAs (p = 0.001).
48 justed mean difference in post-randomization thrombus area was similar between groups: -218.2 mum(2)
49 of the aneurysm wall to size of nonenhancing-thrombus-area predicted AAA rupture with high sensitivit
50 ng of bonds between platelets and treats the thrombus as an evolving porous, viscoelastic material, w
51 ation and more proresolving monocytes in the thrombus, as well as an increased number of cells in an
52 herefore, to describe the temporal trends in thrombus aspiration (TA) use in Sweden before, during, a
53 in 221 of 9155 patients (2.4%) randomized to thrombus aspiration and 262 of 9151 (2.9%) randomized to
54                                      Routine thrombus aspiration during PCI for ST-segment-elevation
55 rials to determine the benefits and risks of thrombus aspiration during PCI in patients with ST-segme
56                                              Thrombus aspiration during percutaneous coronary interve
57     The 3 eligible randomized trials (TAPAS [Thrombus Aspiration During Percutaneous Coronary Interve
58  and after dissemination of the TASTE trial (Thrombus Aspiration in ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarctio
59 tion in Acute Myocardial Infarction], TASTE [Thrombus Aspiration in ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarctio
60 recombinant tissue plasminogen activator and thrombus aspiration or maceration, with or without stent
61 de a rationale for future trials of improved thrombus aspiration technologies in this high-risk subgr
62 Myocardial Infarction] thrombus grade >/=3), thrombus aspiration was associated with fewer cardiovasc
63  use of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors and thrombus aspiration.
64                             Patients with LV thrombus at 6 months were restudied at 1 year.
65 us because of its unique ability to identify thrombus based on tissue characteristics related to avas
66 rdiography for the detection of intracardiac thrombus because of its unique ability to identify throm
67 ch and observe in real-time formation of the thrombus, blockage of cerebral perfusion and eventually
68                    In the subgroup with high thrombus burden (TIMI [Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarc
69 tion, there is a strong signal toward higher thrombus burden and poorer outcomes.
70 utic measures to efficiently reduce existent thrombus burden are scarce.
71                                              Thrombus burden as measured by the Modified Miller Index
72                                  In the high thrombus burden group, the trends toward reduced cardiov
73 to further develop strategies for minimizing thrombus burden, these results may help identify patient
74 f thrombus resolution, significantly reduced thrombus burden, with significantly less neutrophil infi
75 cular to left ventricular diameter ratio and thrombus burden.
76 mes, and predictors of left ventricular (LV) thrombus by using sequential cardiac magnetic resonance
77 he immediate and long-term safety as well as thrombus-capturing efficacy for 5 weeks after implantati
78 ween aggregates, suggesting a level of intra-thrombus communication.
79    Venous thrombus weights were measured and thrombus composition was determined by Martius scarlet b
80 ential platelet processes such as spreading, thrombus consolidation, and clot retraction.
81 : (1) a priming role of platelet adhesion in thrombus contraction and subsequent fibrin formation; (2
82 ow for exact determination of the age of the thrombus depending on changes of its elasticity.
83             For both problems, the simulated thrombus deposition agreed very well with experimental o
84                                           LV thrombus detected by LGE CMR but not by echocardiography
85 te contemporary antithrombotic treatment, LV thrombus detected by LGE CMR is associated with a 4-fold
86 nostic significance of left ventricular (LV) thrombus detected by LGE CMR is unknown.
87 lso compared outcomes among patients with LV thrombus detected by LGE CMR stratified by whether the L
88  study of consecutive adult patients with LV thrombus detected by LGE CMR who were matched on the dat
89 tients received anticoagulant therapy before thrombus detection (p = 0.13 vs. patients without thromb
90                          Biodistribution and thrombus detection was investigated in cynomolgus monkey
91 as no effect on models of arterial or venous thrombus development, but remarkably prevents experiment
92 lpha2AP appears essential for stasis-induced thrombus development, which suggests that targeting alph
93 this mechanism, and how it may contribute to thrombus development.
94 ow-up of 181 weeks +/- 168, patients with LV thrombus displayed a very low rate of stroke (0%), perip
95 ha2-antiplasmin inactivation on experimental thrombus dissolution and bleeding.
96 olytic efficacy, essentially by accelerating thrombus dissolution and preventing rethrombosis.
97 m assembles at the site of pulmonary emboli, thrombus dissolution is halted by alpha2-antiplasmin.
98                                              Thrombus dissolution was markedly accelerated in mice wi
99                              Despite greater thrombus dissolution, alpha2-antiplasmin inactivation al
100  3-kinase dose dependently modulate platelet thrombus dynamics.
101        When tPA is introduced at the clot or thrombus edge, lysis proceeds as a front.
102 ectomy in the anterior cerebral circulation, thrombus embolization resulting in Willisian collateral
103 o vessel occlusion and significantly reduced thrombus embolization.
104               We recently reported that peri-thrombus endothelium is targeted by HIT antibodies, but
105                  Elastography as a method of thrombus evaluation, provides information about relative
106 inly due to a high incidence of intracardiac thrombus even among patients who received adequate antic
107 on generates drag forces which the fluid and thrombus exert on one another.
108 umulates on the endothelium and the platelet thrombus following injury.
109 gen all attenuated along with a reduction in thrombus formation (both in vitro and in vivo).
110 on on biomaterials and related mechanisms of thrombus formation (thrombosis).
111                                   Pathogenic thrombus formation accounts for the etiology of many ser
112 ance to elucidate the mechanisms of platelet thrombus formation after vessel wall injury.
113 istic studies suggests that RBCs can promote thrombus formation and enhance thrombus stability.
114 esterol increased platelet responsiveness in thrombus formation and ensuing fibrin formation, resulti
115 hesion of platelets is crucial in predicting thrombus formation and growth following a thrombotic eve
116 een published on the role of lamellipodia in thrombus formation and stability.
117                                 Accordingly, thrombus formation and stabilization under high arterial
118 The identification of a ruptured plaque with thrombus formation and subsequent occlusion or downstrea
119    Because extracellular PDI is critical for thrombus formation but its extracellular substrates are
120 ng anti-CLEC-2 antibody, INU1, resulted in a thrombus formation defect in vivo and ex vivo, revealing
121 oietic cell DREAMs are required for platelet thrombus formation following laser-induced arteriolar in
122 tive phenotyping approach of platelet-fibrin thrombus formation has revealed interaction mechanisms o
123 event or block VWF oligomerization attenuate thrombus formation in a murine model of HIT.
124                          Here, we visualized thrombus formation in an in vivo murine model and an end
125  we studied platelet activation and arterial thrombus formation in Apoe(-/-) and Ldlr(-/-) mice fed a
126 tion in the lungs, but the cancer-associated thrombus formation in CLEC-2-depleted mice was significa
127 nd in vivo, the absence of APP did not alter thrombus formation in the femoral artery.
128 y inoculated in the back skin showed massive thrombus formation in the lungs, but the cancer-associat
129 croscopy demonstrated reduced post-traumatic thrombus formation in the pericontusional cortical micro
130  greater inhibition of platelet function and thrombus formation in vitro than chrysin under physiolog
131 c ligand, SR12813, was observed to attenuate thrombus formation in vivo in humanised PXR transgenic m
132 om vascular cells, is essential for complete thrombus formation in vivo, but other extracellular ERp5
133   Consequently, targeting of EETs diminished thrombus formation in vivo, which identifies this approa
134  negative role in platelet activation and in thrombus formation in vivo.
135                    Thus, after a short time, thrombus formation is governed by alphaIIbbeta3 binding
136 c conditions in the absence of secreted PDI, thrombus formation is suppressed and maintains a quiesce
137                        The time to occlusive thrombus formation lengthened in these mice and correlat
138 mounts of serotonin that they release during thrombus formation or acute inflammation.
139 associated complications either by enhancing thrombus formation or by initiating various signaling ev
140  which platelet polyphosphate contributes to thrombus formation remains unclear.
141    Given that coagulation is involved in the thrombus formation stage on atherosclerotic plaque ruptu
142 dent FVIII activation sets the threshold for thrombus formation through contact phase-generated FIXa.
143   Platelet aggregation responses, as well as thrombus formation under arterial flow conditions on col
144 o1, which may contribute to Ca(2+) entry and thrombus formation under arterial shear.
145 tive Ca2+ signaling translated into impaired thrombus formation under flow and a protection of Bin2fl
146  differ between a static spreading assay and thrombus formation under flow.
147 ntrol, exposure to fire simulation increased thrombus formation under low-shear (73+/-14%) and high-s
148 gation at low doses of collagen and impaired thrombus formation under shear stress.
149 addition to its effects on acute thrombosis, thrombus formation was also markedly suppressed in alpha
150                                    Markedly, thrombus formation was enhanced in blood from chimeric m
151      Unexpected evidence of pulmonary artery thrombus formation was found in 19% of SSc-PAH patients.
152                                              Thrombus formation was quantified by intravital microsco
153                               No significant thrombus formation was seen in alpha2AP(-/-) mice (P < .
154                          Similarly, arterial thrombus formation was significantly reduced in response
155 x-4) or by chelation of extracellular Ca(2+) Thrombus formation was studied on collagen-coated surfac
156 rect inhibition of FXIa can block pathologic thrombus formation while preserving normal hemostasis.
157 elet aggregation, oxygen radical output, and thrombus formation, and carotid occlusion, while tail he
158 exhibited prolonged bleeding times, impaired thrombus formation, and reduced survival following major
159 ipodium formation is not required for stable thrombus formation, and that morphological changes of pl
160                 After each exposure, ex vivo thrombus formation, fibrinolysis, platelet activation, a
161 e suppression activates platelets, increases thrombus formation, impairs vascular function, and promo
162 isorders indicated characteristic defects in thrombus formation, in cases of factor V, XI or XII defi
163        While thrombin is the key protease in thrombus formation, other coagulation proteases, such as
164 oles of factor XIIIa-specific cross-links in thrombus formation, regression, or probability for embol
165 ity, immunogenicity risks and the hazards of thrombus formation, still need to be addressed.
166 en-dependent platelet aggregation, adhesion, thrombus formation, superoxide anion generation, and sur
167 eptor 1), leading to platelet activation and thrombus formation, which can be inhibited by rivaroxaba
168 onstrated poor vascularization and increased thrombus formation.
169 e electrical isolation (LAAEI) could lead to thrombus formation.
170 therosclerotic plaque rupture and subsequent thrombus formation.
171 itrullinates plasma proteins, thus affecting thrombus formation.
172 ects of PXR ligands on platelet function and thrombus formation.
173 ss in platelet function and life-threatening thrombus formation.
174 I and FIX supports efficient FVIII-dependent thrombus formation.
175  that precedes development of carotid artery thrombus formation.
176 in subsequent platelet activation and stable thrombus formation.
177 ular traps (NETs) have been shown to promote thrombus formation.
178 planin expression in the venous wall trigger thrombus formation.
179 D) equations to represent three processes in thrombus formation: initiation, propagation and stabiliz
180 sisted thrombolysis, percutaneous mechanical thrombus fragmentation, or percutaneous or surgical embo
181 ortened plasma-clotting times, and increased thrombus frequency in the inferior vena cava.
182 ys and autoradiography using a fresh cardiac thrombus from an explanted human heart.
183                           In vivo studies of thrombus generation in mice demonstrate that vitronectin
184 attributes including patient survival, tumor thrombus, genetic profile, and the liver-specific proteo
185 TIMI [Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction] thrombus grade >/=3), thrombus aspiration was associated
186 hrombosis, stent thrombosis, higher modified thrombus grade post first device with consequently highe
187 eceptor-2 (Tlr2)-deficient mice have reduced thrombus growth after carotid artery injury relative to
188 n alphaIIbbeta3 function, thereby supporting thrombus growth and consolidation.
189 IN1, induced abnormal secretion and affected thrombus growth at arterial shear rate, indicating a rol
190 robiota restored a significant difference in thrombus growth between the genotypes.
191 ver, administration of VWF rescues defective thrombus growth in Tlr2(-/-) mice in vivo.
192 s regulated by gut microbiota and determines thrombus growth in Tlr2(-/-) mice.
193  boundary layer downstream, thus restricting thrombus growth into the vessel lumen.
194 f GPVI and CLEC-2 agonists and a decrease in thrombus growth on a collagen surface under arterial she
195 ncreased the rate of platelet deposition and thrombus growth.
196           To confirm or rule out a suspected thrombus, he underwent gadolinium-enhanced cardiac magne
197 control patients, mainly due to intracardiac thrombus identified on transesophageal echocardiogram (1
198 tic segmentation of the AAA and intraluminal thrombus (ILT) from medical images, the entire analysis
199       Our prior work implicated intraluminal thrombus (ILT) in AAAs to be a potential source of syste
200 he association of preprocedural intraluminal thrombus (ILT) volume with aneurysm sac growth following
201                    Magnetic resonance direct thrombus imaging (MRDTI), a technique without intravenou
202 n 1 patient and intraluminal local transient thrombus in a second patient.
203 31 patients presented uniform, hypoechogenic thrombus in B-mode image.
204 (67%) patients, who were more likely to have Thrombus in Myocardial Infarction flow 0 or 1 in the cul
205 shape, distance to the first bifurcation and thrombus in the left atrial appendage.
206  septal aneurysms (8), septal bags (6) and 1 thrombus in the left atrial appendage.
207 culosis and a clinically unsuspected partial thrombus in the splenic vein on imaging.
208 eficiency causes prolonged bleeding, reduced thrombus incidence, thrombus size, fibrin and platelet d
209 w tailoring of pharmacotherapy to potentiate thrombus instability, through fragmentation of platelet
210  also assessed thrombin generation, platelet-thrombus interactions, and platelet accumulation in thro
211 les accumulated preferentially at the plaque-thrombus interface.
212          The spontaneous lysis of a coronary thrombus is a natural protective mechanism against lasti
213             Moreover, the homogeneity of the thrombus is also changed.
214 minutes, HIT antigen was detected within the thrombus itself at the interface between the platelet co
215 level of inter-observer agreement was venous thrombus (kappa = 0.600).
216 prognosis and management of left ventricular thrombus (LVT).
217 ive, thereby allowing us to study effects of thrombus microstructure and properties on its deformatio
218           Moreover, we combine this proposed thrombus model with a particle-based model which simulat
219 n input variable in the proposed phase-field thrombus model.
220  neutrophils did not affect onset, severity, thrombus morphology, or liver fibrin deposition.
221 tor XII did not alter VT onset, severity, or thrombus morphology.
222  by echocardiography versus patients with LV thrombus not detected by echocardiography (P=0.25).
223                     The volume fraction of a thrombus obtained from the particle simulation is mapped
224 3 of the CA patients (31%) with intracardiac thrombus on transesophageal echocardiogram received adeq
225  without apparent epicardial coronary artery thrombus or stenosis.
226 troke, major bleeding, filter migration, CCA thrombus, or stenosis.
227                            Although coronary thrombus overlying a disrupted atherosclerotic plaque ha
228 us patients compared with the matched non-LV thrombus patients (P<0.001), with annualized rates of 3.
229 e of embolism was significantly higher in LV thrombus patients compared with the matched non-LV throm
230                                    Of 157 LV thrombus patients, 155 were matched to 400 non-LV thromb
231  and 0.8% for LV thrombus and matched non-LV thrombus patients, respectively.
232 nce of embolism compared with matched non-LV thrombus patients.
233 bus patients, 155 were matched to 400 non-LV thrombus patients.
234     Finally, improved imaging of ventricular thrombus plus the availability of non-vitamin K antagoni
235 t is able to rapidly interrupt arterial-type thrombus propagation at exceedingly low doses (<2 ug/kg,
236 monia underwent DECTPA to diagnose pulmonary thrombus (PT); 11 underwent surveillance DECTPA 14 +/-11
237  the ATTRACT trial (Acute Venous Thrombosis: Thrombus Removal With Adjunctive Catheter-Directed Throm
238  The ATTRACT trial (Acute Venous Thrombosis: Thrombus Removal with Adjunctive Catheter-Directed Throm
239                                  An arterial thrombus required urgent revision 8 h after the operatio
240 murine endothelial cells and improved venous thrombus resolution and pulmonary vaso-occlusions in End
241 ies define mechanisms by which p53 regulates thrombus resolution by increasing inflammatory vascular
242 onist of p53, quinacrine, accelerates venous thrombus resolution in a p53-dependent manner, even afte
243 , and organ damage could not be reversed, as thrombus resolution was not achieved.
244 was the proportion of children with complete thrombus resolution, and freedom from recurrent venous t
245 ension (CTEPH) is characterized by defective thrombus resolution, pulmonary artery obstruction, and v
246 PM that was enriched at the natural onset of thrombus resolution, significantly reduced thrombus burd
247    Despite the clinical importance of venous thrombus resolution, the cellular and molecular mediator
248 nction but was associated with faster venous thrombus resolution, whereas endothelial TGFbetaRII dele
249 bo-inflammatory disease in vivo and improves thrombus resolution.
250                                           LV thrombus resolved in 22 of 25 patients (88%) restudied w
251             Although this might reduce mural-thrombus risk, the relatively more complex vortex phenom
252                                     The mean thrombus score using any of the three scoring systems yi
253  that platelets rather form filopodia in the thrombus shell, and are flattened with filopodium-like s
254 of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) at the thrombus site.
255                     The primary endpoint was thrombus size at the post-randomization visit with plate
256 on, at which time ex vivo assays to quantify thrombus size under dynamic flow conditions and platelet
257 longed bleeding, reduced thrombus incidence, thrombus size, fibrin and platelet deposition in the lig
258 ans by which fibrinolytic enzymes can reduce thrombus size.
259 ture comprised of a linear fluid phase and a thrombus (solid) phase.
260 smin inactivation showed a unique pattern of thrombus specificity, because unlike r-tPA, it did not d
261  experimental evidence for the importance of thrombus stability and highlight the need for physiologi
262   We found that rivaroxaban reduced arterial thrombus stability in a mouse model of arterial thrombos
263  in blood-lymph separation and implicated in thrombus stability in thrombosis and hemostasis.
264 flow conditions, review techniques to assess thrombus stability in vitro, and describe novel imaging
265                                              Thrombus stability is thus a direct determinant of clini
266 attention has been paid to factors affecting thrombus stability, despite evidence linking impaired sp
267 s can promote thrombus formation and enhance thrombus stability.
268  system and that this system is critical for thrombus stabilization and growth have identified factor
269 ssed platelet adhesion, platelet activation, thrombus structure and fibrin clot formation in real tim
270             Kinetics of platelet activation, thrombus structure and fibrin formation were assessed by
271 clusion (defined as an isolated intracranial thrombus that impedes ascending blood flow) in the conte
272 ian, three-dimensional, phase-field model of thrombus that is calibrated with existing in vitro exper
273 rta, often with a false lumen and intramural thrombus that thickens the wall.
274 bolism was not different in patients with LV thrombus that was also detected by echocardiography vers
275 ional study to integrate the initiation of a thrombus through platelet aggregation with its subsequen
276  and effective release of tPA at the site of thrombus, thus achieving efficient clot dissolution whil
277 nd increases the exposure of an intracranial thrombus to alteplase (recombinant tissue plasminogen ac
278 e thrombolysis by increasing the exposure of thrombus to endogenous and exogenous thrombolytics.
279 igation of platelet morphology in an induced thrombus under flow revealed that platelets rather form
280      In addition, RP101075 treatment reduced thrombus volume, which was accompanied by a reduction of
281 were positively correlated with AAA size and thrombus volume.
282 THV deployment geometries were analyzed, and thrombus volumes were computed through manual 3-dimensio
283 a substantially higher extent in mice with a thrombus vs those without a thrombus.
284                                   Autologous thrombus was administered from below the filter in seven
285 cted by LGE CMR stratified by whether the LV thrombus was also detected by echocardiography or not.
286                          The incidence of LV thrombus was as follows: (a) nonanterior infarction, LVE
287                                   Results LV thrombus was detected in 27 of 392 patients (7%): 18 (5%
288                                 An entrapped thrombus was found in the filter in 6 patients.
289                                       Device thrombus was observed in 34 patients (4.1%) and was not
290                               Device-related thrombus was seen in 2.7%.
291                 Each iatrogenic-administered thrombus was successfully captured by the filter until r
292                                           LV thrombus was the only independent predictor of the compo
293  Analysis of IVC thrombosis revealed greater thrombus weight, length, myeloid cell recruitment, and m
294                                       Venous thrombus weights were measured and thrombus composition
295              No perforations, steam pops, or thrombus were noted.
296 dy 21 patients still presented hypoechogenic thrombus, whereas mixed echogenicity of thrombus appeare
297 tractile forces onto the fibrin network of a thrombus, which over time increases clot density and dec
298 genicity within it raised the suspicion of a thrombus, which was confirmed on a contrast-enhanced CT
299 eria were: symptoms for longer than 3 weeks, thrombus within 3 cm of the sapheno-femoral junction, in
300      Transesophageal-echocardiogram revealed thrombus within the left atrium and ventricle.

 
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