- embolic infarct
- an infarct caused by an embolus.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
Infarct — An area of tissue death due to a local lack of oxygen. For example, in a myocardial infarction there is death of myocardial (heart muscle) tissue due to sudden (acute) deprivation of circulating blood. This is usually caused by arteriosclerosis… … Medical dictionary
Stroke — For other uses, see Stroke (disambiguation). Stroke Classification and external resources CT scan slice of the brain showing a right hemispheric ischemic stroke (left side of image). ICD 10 … Wikipedia
Cerebral infarction — Cerebral infarct Classification and external resources CT scan slice of the brain showing a right hemispheric cerebral infarct (left side of image). ICD 10 I 63 … Wikipedia
Animal models of ischemic stroke — are procedures inducing cerebral ischemia. The aim is the study of basic processes or potential therapeutic interventions in this disease, and the extension of the pathophysiological knowledge on and/or the improvement of medical treatment of… … Wikipedia
Brain ischemia — Classification and external resources CT scan slice of the brain showing a right hemispheric cerebral infarct (left side of image). ICD 10 G45.9, I67.8 … Wikipedia
Cerebral hypoxia — For other uses, see hypoxia (disambiguation). Cerebral hypoxia Classification and external resources Circle of Willis Arteries beneath brain ICD 9 … Wikipedia
Mesenteric ischemia — Classification and external resources ICD 10 K55.9 ICD 9 557.9 … Wikipedia
Lacunar stroke — Infobox Disease Name = PAGENAME Caption = DiseasesDB = 31186 ICD10 = ICD10|G|46|5|g|40 ICD10|G|46|7|g|40 ICD9 = ICD9|434.91 ICDO = OMIM = MedlinePlus = eMedicineSubj = pmr eMedicineTopic = 63 MeshID = D020520 Lacunar stroke occurs when one of the … Wikipedia
Vascular myelopathy — Classification and external resources ICD 10 G95.1 ICD 9 336.1 Vascular myelopathy (vasc … Wikipedia
Gangrene — The death of body tissue due to the loss of blood supply to that tissue, sometimes permitting bacteria to invade it and accelerate its decay. The word gangrene comes from the Greek ganggraina denoting an eating sore that ends in mortification (of … Medical dictionary