Results 311 to 320 of about 855,508 (362)
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The acute abdomen

BMJ, 2013
A 45 year old woman presented to the emergency department with an eight hour history of sudden onset abdominal pain. The pain was severe, sharp, and worse on movement. She felt nauseous but had not vomited. She had last opened her bowels earlier that day, passing a small amount of hard stool.
B H, van Duren   +3 more
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Gossypiboma of the Abdomen

Archives of Surgery, 1996
Intra-abdominal cysts may rise from a variety of organs. However, foreign-body reaction and cyst formation should be considered in the differential diagnosis. In this report, we describe the finding of a preoperatively undetected gossypiboma. A gossypiboma is a mass within the body that is composed of a cotton matrix; in this case, an unmarked ...
H, Moyle, O J, Hines, D W, McFadden
openaire   +2 more sources

Imaging of the Abdomen

Zeitschrift für Gastroenterologie, 2002
In the last decade, innovative ultrasound technology has become the primary imaging method in Gastroenterology. Compared to other imaging techniques (e. g., computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging), conventional ultrasound images have the disadvantage of a restricted field-of-view (width), thus producing images that are not always easy to ...
C F, Dietrich   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

MRI of the abdomen

Archives Internationales de Physiologie et de Biochimie, 1985
Clinical MRI of the body has not so far produced results consistently comparable with X-ray CT or high-resolution real-time ultrasound. Present development in MRI technology (new sequences, respiratory gating) and the application of paramagnetic contrast agents are however promising features. MRI might play a useful rôle also in abdominal examination.
W L, Curati, R E, Steiner
openaire   +2 more sources

Acute Abdomen

Gastroenterology Clinics of North America, 1988
Acute surgical abdomen is the object of urgent surgical attention. The objective of emergency operation is to interrupt a process that has a steadily worsening prognosis on a scale of hours unless effective surgical treatment is rendered. There are basically three processes to address: free or incipient sepsis and peritonitis, gastrointestinal soilage,
P J, Jung, R C, Merrell
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Diseases of the Abdomen

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1986
Because the abdomen of the adult horse is too thick to obtain good-quality radiographs, diagnostic ultrasound is a particularly valuable imaging modality in the diagnosis of abdominal disease. The size, shape, position, and texture of the liver, spleen, kidneys, urinary bladder, gravid uterus, and gut wall can be determined by scanning the abdominal ...
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An Abominable Abdomen

Pediatrics In Review, 2022
Naseem, Ravanbakhsh   +2 more
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The Acute Abdomen

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1994
Acute abdomen patients present a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge to emergency clinicians. The decision to perform surgery or to treat medically is often difficult to make and requires assimilating patient information, laboratory findings, radiological studies, and DPL.
openaire   +2 more sources

MDCT of the abdomen

European Radiology Supplements, 2006
Multi-detector row computed tomography (MDCT) enables fast and thin acquisition of the abdominal anatomy. This allows multi-pass multi-planar studies that can be obtained during defined circulatory phases. When bolus timing is adequate, arterial phases with high contrast levels provide "free lunch" CT angiographies eliminating the need for diagnostic ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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