Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins -- therapeutic use : The multiple therapeutic targets of A20 / edited by Christiane Ferran, MD, PhD, Department of Surgery, Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Center for Vascular Biology Research, and the Transplant Insitutue, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Proteins and peptides that are involved in SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION within the cell. Included here are peptides and proteins that regulate the activity of TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS and cellular processes in response to signals from CELL SURFACE RECEPTORS. Intracellular signaling peptide and proteins may be part of an enzymatic signaling cascade or act through binding to and modifying the action of other signaling factors
Bleeding into one or both CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES including the BASAL GANGLIA and the CEREBRAL CORTEX. It is often associated with HYPERTENSION and CRANIOCEREBRAL TRAUMA
Bleeding into one or both CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES including the BASAL GANGLIA and the CEREBRAL CORTEX. It is often associated with HYPERTENSION and CRANIOCEREBRAL TRAUMA
Here are entered works on waterways closely following a coastline, improved or constructed for the purpose of connecting points on the same coast
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Intracoastal waterways : Life along the inner coast : a naturalist's guide to the sounds, inlets, rivers, and intracoastal waterway from Norfolk to Key West / Robert L. Lippson, Alice Jane Lippson
2009
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Intracoastal waterways Alaska -- See Also the narrower term Inside Passage
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Intracoastal waterways -- Atlantic Coast (U.S.) : Life along the inner coast : a naturalist's guide to the sounds, inlets, rivers, and intracoastal waterway from Norfolk to Key West / Robert L. Lippson, Alice Jane Lippson
2009
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Intracoastal waterways British Columbia -- See Also the narrower term Inside Passage
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Intracoastal waterways -- Health aspects -- Congresses : Understanding the connections between coastal waters and ocean ecosystem services and human health : workshop summary / Rose Marie Martinez and Erin Rusch, rapporteurs ; Roundtable on Environmental Health Sciences, Research, and Medicine, Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice, Institute of Medicine of the National Academies
Here are entered works on intracorporeal pumping mechanisms that duplicate the function of the natural heart. Works on extracorporeal pumping mechanisms that duplicate the function of the natural heart are entered under Heart, Mechanical
Intracranial Aneurysm -- diagnosis : Intracranial vascular malformations and aneurysms : from diagnostic work-up to endovascular therapy / M. Forsting, I. Wanke., eds. ; with contributions by C. Cognard [and others] ; foreword by M. Knauth
Abnormal outpouching in the wall of intracranial blood vessels. Most common are the saccular (berry) aneurysms located at branch points in CIRCLE OF WILLIS at the base of the brain. Vessel rupture results in SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE or INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES. Giant aneurysms (>2.5 cm in diameter) may compress adjacent structures, including the OCULOMOTOR NERVE. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, p841)
Abnormal outpouching in the wall of intracranial blood vessels. Most common are the saccular (berry) aneurysms located at branch points in CIRCLE OF WILLIS at the base of the brain. Vessel rupture results in SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE or INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES. Giant aneurysms (>2.5 cm in diameter) may compress adjacent structures, including the OCULOMOTOR NERVE. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, p841)
Abnormal outpouching in the wall of intracranial blood vessels. Most common are the saccular (berry) aneurysms located at branch points in CIRCLE OF WILLIS at the base of the brain. Vessel rupture results in SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE or INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES. Giant aneurysms (>2.5 cm in diameter) may compress adjacent structures, including the OCULOMOTOR NERVE. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, p841)
Intracranial aneurysms -- Imaging -- Congresses : Cerebral aneurysm detection : first challenge, CADA 2020, held in conjunction with MICCAI 2020, Lima, Peru, October 8, 2020, proceedings / Anja Hennemuth, Leonid Goubergrits, Matthias Ivantsits, Jan-Martin Kuhnigk (eds.)
Constriction of arteries in the SKULL due to sudden, sharp, and often persistent smooth muscle contraction in blood vessels. Intracranial vasospasm results in reduced vessel lumen caliber, restricted blood flow to the brain, and BRAIN ISCHEMIA that may lead to hypoxic-ischemic brain injury (HYPOXIA-ISCHEMIA, BRAIN)
Constriction of arteries in the SKULL due to sudden, sharp, and often persistent smooth muscle contraction in blood vessels. Intracranial vasospasm results in reduced vessel lumen caliber, restricted blood flow to the brain, and BRAIN ISCHEMIA that may lead to hypoxic-ischemic brain injury (HYPOXIA-ISCHEMIA, BRAIN)
Intracranial Arteriosclerosis -- therapy. : Intracranial atherosclerosis / edited by Jong S. Kim, Louis R. Caplan, K.S. Lawrence Wong ; foreword by Geoffrey A. Donnan
Congenital vascular anomalies in the brain characterized by direct communication between an artery and a vein without passing through the CAPILLARIES. The locations and size of the shunts determine the symptoms including HEADACHES; SEIZURES; STROKE; INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES; mass effect; and vascular steal effect
Congenital vascular anomalies in the brain characterized by direct communication between an artery and a vein without passing through the CAPILLARIES. The locations and size of the shunts determine the symptoms including HEADACHES; SEIZURES; STROKE; INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES; mass effect; and vascular steal effect