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Emory Angioplasty versus Surgery Trial. A trial comparing long-term outcomes of patients with multivessel coronary disease undergoing revascularization with PTCA to CABG
Conclusion No significant difference in mortality between CABG and PTCA as primary therapy for multivessel disease; PTCA had a greater need for repeat revascularization
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China is also Saudi Arabia's largest trading partner, and the Kingdom will likely surpass Russia this year as China's top crude supplier -- a position it held from 2006 to 2016 during Eastward Shift 1.0.
It also includes a flyover to serve the traffic inbound from Al Asayel Road southward to Al Yalayes Road eastward.
As the convective clouds in western Qinghai continue to move eastward, the clouds at the Qinghai/Sichuan border continue to grow and shift south.
This moment is therefore a special one for those who admire Eastward Ho!
The Ringed Planet continues to retrograde throughout July, its westward motion narrowing the gap between it and eastward moving Mars from 19[degrees] to 11[degrees].
That eastward movement demonstrates the Moon's motion in its orbit around our world.
So for much of the country sunny skies prevailed beneath a shallow southerly flow while this pattern joins the eastward drift into this new week.
That river now flows eastward from the Andes for more than 6,000 kilometers, notes Russell W.
In a similar vein, Anne-Julia Zwierlein analyses contemporary thinking about risk, credit, and insurance, delineating in the process how city comedy incorporates three conflicting life-narratives: the 'plot of increase' or patient accumulation; the 'plot of adventure' or deliberate risk-taking; and the 'plot of roguery' or living by one's wits--a flexible scheme that applies equally well to its romantic treatment in The Merchant of Venice and its parodic handling in Eastward Ho!.
It is this recognizable experience of embarkation and disembarkation, the epitome of the human cost and impact of such ordeals, that is brilliantly portrayed in Henry Nelson O'Neil's 'Eastward Ho!' (1858) and its companion piece, Home Again' (1859).
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