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The ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI) or ankle-brachial index (ABI) is the ratio of the blood pressure at the ankle to the blood pressure in the upper arm (brachium). Compared to the arm, lower blood pressure in the leg suggests blocked arteries due to peripheral artery disease (PAD).
An auditory brainstem implant (ABI) is a surgically implanted electronic device that provides a sense of sound to a person who is profoundly deaf, due to retrocochlear hearing impairment (due to illness or injury damaging the cochlea or auditory nerve, and so precluding the use of a cochlear implant).
The Merck Manuals; Macer Floridus; A Manual of Diseases of the Nervous System; Manual of Medical Diagnostics and Healthcare; Martindale: The Complete Drug Reference; Medical Ethics (book) List of medical textbooks; Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy; Merck Veterinary Manual; Miller's Anesthesia; The Modern Home Physician; Musculoskeletal ...
ABI: acquired brain injury ankle brachial pressure index: ABLA: acute blood loss anemia: ABMT: autologous bone marrow transplantation: Abn: abnormal ABO: Landsteiner's blood grouping system: ABPA: allergic broncho-pulmonary aspergillosis: ABPI: ankle brachial pressure index: ABR Auditory Brainstem Response: ABT: antibiotic therapy: ABVD
A study by Newman et al. at Duke University Medical Center showed an increased incidence of cognitive decline after coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG), both immediately (53 percent at discharge from hospital) and over time (36 percent six weeks, 24 percent at six months, and 42 percent at five years). [3]
The Merck Manuals (outside the U.S. and Canada: The MSD Manuals; Chinese: 默沙东诊疗手册; pinyin: Mòshādōng Zhěnliáo Shǒucè) are medical references published by the American pharmaceutical company Merck & Co. (known as MSD outside the United States and Canada), that cover a wide range of medical topics, including disorders, tests, diagnoses, and drugs.
Newman married his first wife in 1952, who died in 1965. In 1971 he married his second wife, who died in 1982. Upon his death in 1989 he was survived by several stepchildren from his second marriage. [1]
The Washington Manual of Medical Therapeutics is a medical textbook first published in 1942 by Wayland MacFarlane, a professor at the Washington University School of Medicine and chief of the internal medicine ward. Described as the "bible of the medical ward" the Washington Manual of Medical Therapeutics is now in its Thirty-Sixth Edition and ...