Tests showed Christine had suffered a bilateral stroke as a result of a blood clot in her leg that travelled to her heart, ...
Background Internal jugular vein (IJV) stenosis has recently been recognized as a plausible source of symptom etiology in patients with cerebral venous outflow disorders (CVD). Diagnosis and ...
Internal Jugular, Subclavian, and Axillary Deep Venous Thrombosis and the Risk of Pulmonary Embolism
Both V/Q scans were negative. In these five patients, all had internal jugular vein(s) thrombosis and one patient had an associated axillary-subclavian vein thrombosis as well. All patients had an ...
General side effects: tiredness, headache, muscle pain, chills, joint pain, fever, nausea, feeling unwell, swollen lymph ...
Hepatic vascular thrombosis,Herpes zoster reactivation,Hepatitis Immune-mediated,Interstitial lung disease,Jugular vein embolism,Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy,Liver damage,Low birth weight,Multisystem ...
Deep vein thrombosis (DVT), a condition that causes a clot in a vein (often in your legs), can sometimes develop without warning—especially when you’re traveling or seated for long stretches ...
A review of the combined data obtained from numerous research showed that the internal jugular vein route has a lower risk of infection (10%) and thrombosis (7%) compared to the subclavian vein route, ...
Internal Jugular Vein Stenosis (IJVS) has been reported in the literature to be caused by extrinsic compression by styloid process, C1 transverse process, or both. Treatments under investigation for ...
As you get older, it’s not uncommon to notice large, twisty veins forming on your legs. According to the Society for Vascular Surgery, as many as 40 million Americans have what are known as varicose ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results