Author: Robert Rosenson, MD, Professor of Medicine (Cardiology) at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and Director of Cardiometabolic Disorders for the Mount Sinai Health System Bottom Line: ...
Author: Robert Rosenson, MD, Professor of Medicine (Cardiology) at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and Director of Cardiometabolic Disorders for the Mount Sinai Health System Bottom Line: ...
More-viscous blood, which increases the propensity for clotting, is a sign that patients hospitalized for COVID-19 are more likely to do worse over the short term, according to data from a New York ...
People with thicker blood were less likely to survive hospitalization for COVID-19, according to an observational study. As estimates of whole blood viscosity at different shear rates, estimated ...
A research team led by MedUni Vienna has shown in a study that purely optical measurements of the viscosity of blood plasma may provide information about the severity and progression of COVID-19. The ...
COLUMBIA — One University of Missouri scientist found a method to monitor and detect how thick or how viscous blood is using ultrasound technology. "What's not to like?" senior Research scientist ...
Cerebral blood delivery depends on mechanisms such as electrical signaling, which propagates through capillary networks to upstream arterioles to deliver blood, and calcium signaling, which fine-tunes ...