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Chemical Compound Review

LTBB003360     lead(+2) cation; oxygen(-2) anion

Synonyms: AC1L4LQU, AR-1J3097, AR-1J3098, A26757, C17379, ...
 
 
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Disease relevance of Leady lead monoxide

  • Lead oxide injection studies of the nutrient artery alone in nine cadavers demonstrated no contiguous muscle or cutaneous communications [1].
 

High impact information on Leady lead monoxide

  • Lead oxide studies 10 months after abdominoplasty revealed no irrefutable evidence of the reestablishment of rectus abdominis perforators to the integument, although obviously some reconnections had formed at the microcirculatory level to partially revascularize some flaps [2].
  • Lead oxide injections were administered in 16 fresh frozen human upper extremity amputation specimens to determine the contribution of the isolated radial recurrent artery (RRA) and subsequent 3- and 6-cm segments of radial artery (RA) to a rotational brachioradialis muscle flap [3].
  • Lead oxide was injected into each axillary artery of three standard white domestic swine [4].
 

Analytical, diagnostic and therapeutic context of Leady lead monoxide

References

  1. The surgical anatomy of the principal nutrient vessel of the tibia. Hallock, G.G., Anous, M.M., Sheridan, B.C. Plast. Reconstr. Surg. (1993) [Pubmed]
  2. Fate of the TRAM flap after abdominoplasty in a rat model. Hallock, G.G., Rice, D.C. Plast. Reconstr. Surg. (1998) [Pubmed]
  3. Vascular anatomy of the brachioradialis rotational musculocutaneous flap. Leversedge, F.J., Casey, P.J., Payne, S.H., Seiler, J.G. The Journal of hand surgery. (2001) [Pubmed]
  4. The axillary tree as a source of musculocutaneous and fasciocutaneous flaps in a fixed-skin porcine model. Murphy, R.X., Sonntag, B.V. Annals of plastic surgery. (1998) [Pubmed]
  5. Bipedicle paraspinous muscle flaps for spinal wound closure: an anatomic and clinical study. Wilhelmi, B.J., Snyder, N., Colquhoun, T., Hadjipavlou, A., Phillips, L.G. Plast. Reconstr. Surg. (2000) [Pubmed]
 
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