Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Dutch term or phrase:
a.c.p. = arteria cerebralis posterior
English translation:
p.c.a. = posterior cerebral artery
Added to glossary by
Emilie
Nov 4, 2005 14:17
18 yrs ago
2 viewers *
Dutch term
a.c.p.
Dutch to English
Medical
Medical (general)
neurology
ischaemisch cerebro vasculair accident *a.c.p.* rechts
Thanks
Francina
Thanks
Francina
Proposed translations
(English)
4 +1 | arteria cerebralis posterior | Emilie |
4 | antegrade cerebral perfusion | Kate Hudson (X) |
Proposed translations
+1
33 mins
Selected
arteria cerebralis posterior
acp = arteria cerebralis posterior
pca in English = posterior cerebral artery
In dit geval rechts (right) = right posterior cerebral artery
If stroke was ischaemic then please give classification, TOAST Criteria (please ... Left middle or anterior cerebral artery. Right posterior cerebral artery ... www.ion.ucl.ac.uk/cavatas_icss/ downloads/Major_event_formTF6r.pdf
pca in English = posterior cerebral artery
In dit geval rechts (right) = right posterior cerebral artery
If stroke was ischaemic then please give classification, TOAST Criteria (please ... Left middle or anterior cerebral artery. Right posterior cerebral artery ... www.ion.ucl.ac.uk/cavatas_icss/ downloads/Major_event_formTF6r.pdf
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thanks
Francina"
21 mins
antegrade cerebral perfusion
It could relate to this treatment
Data suggests that antegrade cerebral perfusion (ACP) when used during DHCA might reduce ischemic brain injury; whether ACP provides improved systemic perfusion is unclear. Our hypothesis was that DHCA+ACP would offer better systemic tissue perfusion and this could be monitored using a VLS probe.
http://www.asaabstracts.com/strands/asaabstracts/abstract.ht...
Data suggests that antegrade cerebral perfusion (ACP) when used during DHCA might reduce ischemic brain injury; whether ACP provides improved systemic perfusion is unclear. Our hypothesis was that DHCA+ACP would offer better systemic tissue perfusion and this could be monitored using a VLS probe.
http://www.asaabstracts.com/strands/asaabstracts/abstract.ht...
Note from asker:
That's what I have, but I don't think it's right. *cerebro vasculair accident* is in layman's terms a stroke. My thought is that this is a *right cerebrovascular accident*, but don't know what a.c.p. stands for in Dutch |
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