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Mayo Foundation

Supported in Part by Grants from the NIH (AM 12302 and CA 11911) and from the Mayo Foundation. [Pg.56]

Assignee Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (Rochester, MN)... [Pg.414]

Gastroenterology Unit, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation,... [Pg.60]

High levels of such non-specific reduction were observed Current address Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic, Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota 55901... [Pg.15]

We thank Mrs. Diana Ayerhart (Mayo Clinic) for her help in preparing this manuscript. We also thank Mayo Foundation, Beckman Instruments, and Fiimigan MAT for their support. [Pg.23]

Figure 19-1 a Normal and ischemic myocardial metabolism of glucose. A total production of 36 moles of ATP results from the aerobic catabolism of 1 mole of glucose and use of NADH and FADH. in the oxidative phosphorylation process in mitochondria. When oxygen is not available, NADH and FADH levels rise and shut off the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Pyruvate is converted to lactate. Only 2 moles of ATP are formed from anaerobic catabolism of 1 mole of glucose. (Adapted from Giuliani, E. R., ei al. Cardiology Fundamentals and Practice, 2nd ed. By permission of the Mayo Foundation, Rochester, MN.)... [Pg.623]

In 1914 he was appointed head of the biochemistry section in the graduate school of the Mayo Foundation, Rochester, part of the University of Minnesota. In 1915 he was appointed director of the division of biochemistry and subsequently professor of physiological chemistry. In 1951 he retired from the Mayo Foundation and accepted the position of visiting professor in the department of biochemistry at Princeton University. [Pg.153]

Chapter 19, Quality Management, by James O. Westgaxd and George G. Klee contains Mayo copyrighted drawings, which remain property of Mayo Foundation. [Pg.2415]

Kendall, E.C. (1915). Trans. Assoc. Am. Physicians 30, 430 Collected Papers Mayo Clin, and Mayo Foundation 7, 393. [Pg.136]

Chapter 13. Antiviral Agents Ernest C. Herrmann, Jr., Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota... [Pg.122]

Mayo Clinic. (2000, March 6). Herb-drug interaction—Natural not always safe. Mayo Foundation for Education and Research, p. 6. [Pg.47]

The authors are grateful for the contributions of Mr. Mark J. Cody, Mr. Young-Soo Han and Dr. Wen-Zhi Zhan. This work was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health (AR51173 and HL37680) and the Mayo Foundation. [Pg.1099]

FIGURE 49.18 The two-dimensional orientation of the articular surface of the humerus with respect to the bicondylar axis. By permission of Mayo Foundation. [Pg.846]

FIGURE 49.30 (a) Contact area of the MCP joint in five joint positions, (b) End on view of the contact area on each of the proximal phalanx bases. The radioulnar width of the contact area becomes narrow in the neutral position and expands in both the hyperextended and fully flexed positions. (From An K.N. and Cooney W.P. 1991. In B.F. Morrey (Ed.), Joint Replacement Arthroplasty, pp. 137-146, New York, Churchill Livingstone. By permission of Mayo Foundation.)... [Pg.860]

Fig 1 38 Subclavian vein course and its relationships with adjacent anatomical structures (from [28], by permission of Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. All rights reserved)... [Pg.25]

D. M. Wilson and N. P. Goldstein Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation Rochester, Minnesota USA... [Pg.347]

Fig. 18.3 Abdominal scout CT image in a patient with a malfunctioning implantable cardioverter-defibrillator. Inspection demonstrated a tight twisting of the lead, which resulted in device malfunction. The most likely diagnosis was twiddler syndrome. (From Hayes DL. Complications and Lloyd MA, Hayes DL. Pacemaker and ICD radiography. In Hayes DL, Lloyd MA, Friedman PA, editors. Cardiac pacing and defibrillation a clinical approach. Armonk [NY] Futura Publishing, 2000 453-84, 485-517. Used with permission of Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research.)... Fig. 18.3 Abdominal scout CT image in a patient with a malfunctioning implantable cardioverter-defibrillator. Inspection demonstrated a tight twisting of the lead, which resulted in device malfunction. The most likely diagnosis was twiddler syndrome. (From Hayes DL. Complications and Lloyd MA, Hayes DL. Pacemaker and ICD radiography. In Hayes DL, Lloyd MA, Friedman PA, editors. Cardiac pacing and defibrillation a clinical approach. Armonk [NY] Futura Publishing, 2000 453-84, 485-517. Used with permission of Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research.)...
Fig. 18.6 Posteroanterior radiograph (A) and close-up view (B) from a patient with intermittent failure to pace. Comparison of the upper and lower pins reveals that the lower of the two unipolar leads is not completely advanced. This difference is more evident on the close-up view. By convention, the lower of the two leads in the connector block is the ventricular lead, so that this patient must have had intermittent or permanent ventricular failure to output. An unrelated ohservation (arrowhead on 6 A) is the shallow positioning of the atrial lead, i.e., the J is much wider than 90°. (From Hayes DL. Pacemaker radiography. In Furman S, Hayes DL, Holmes DR Jr, editors. A practice of cardiac pacing, third edition. Mount Kisco [NY] Futura Publishing, 1993 361 100. Used with permission of Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research.)... Fig. 18.6 Posteroanterior radiograph (A) and close-up view (B) from a patient with intermittent failure to pace. Comparison of the upper and lower pins reveals that the lower of the two unipolar leads is not completely advanced. This difference is more evident on the close-up view. By convention, the lower of the two leads in the connector block is the ventricular lead, so that this patient must have had intermittent or permanent ventricular failure to output. An unrelated ohservation (arrowhead on 6 A) is the shallow positioning of the atrial lead, i.e., the J is much wider than 90°. (From Hayes DL. Pacemaker radiography. In Furman S, Hayes DL, Holmes DR Jr, editors. A practice of cardiac pacing, third edition. Mount Kisco [NY] Futura Publishing, 1993 361 100. Used with permission of Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research.)...
ERIK L. RITMAN, ERIC A. HOFFMAN, TSUTOMU IWASAKI, ROBERT S. SCHWARTZ, and LAWRENCE J. SINAK Department of Physiology and Biophysics and Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and Internal Medicine Mayo Foundation Rochester, MN 55905, U.S.A. [Pg.135]


See other pages where Mayo Foundation is mentioned: [Pg.414]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.331]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.333]    [Pg.333]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.420]   
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