-
abdominal conditions such as
appendicitis or
diverticulitis due to
haematogenous spread through the
portal vein. It can also
develop as a complication...
-
resulting from
diabetic wounds, fracture-related bone infection, or
haematogenous osteomyelitis. The
condition is
often diagnosed through imaging, which...
-
dissemination include, in
order of most to
least confirmatory evidence,
haematogenous spread,
direct extension from
adjacent bone
marrow infiltration, centripetal...
-
ventricular walls as a
result of
haematogenous dissemination. The
mechanism described by Rich and
McCordock in
which haematogenous dissemination at the time...
- the
symptoms in 1799, is
tuberculosis of the spine,
usually due to
haematogenous spread from
other sites,
often the lungs. The
lower thoracic and upper...
-
therefore these metastatic cells can also
eventually spread through the
haematogenous route.[citation needed] This is
typical route of
metastasis for sarcomas...
-
medicine is
thought to date back to Aristotle,
where he came up with the “
Haematogenous Reproduction Theory”. However, evidence-based
reproductive medicine...
- blood–brain
barrier will weaken, and
microglia will be
replaced with
haematogenous, marrow-derived cells,
namely myeloid progenitor cells and macrophages...
- is scarce. Uncommonly,
breast and
gluteal abscesses can
occur due to
haematogenous (carried by the blood) and
lymphangiomatous spread.
Regional bone infection...
- histoplasmosis. Histoplasmosis, like blastomycosis, may
disseminate haematogenously to
infect internal organs and tissues, but it does so in a very low...