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Cancer of the Cervix

New England Journal of Medicine, 1969
Of the 325000 cancer deaths the American Cancer Society predicts for 1969 9700 will be cancer of the cervix. During the past 25 years early diagnosis and advanced therapy have reduced the adjusted death rate from uterine cancer by 50%. Contributing factors are believed to be low socioeconomic status early age of first coitus and a contribution from ...
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Cancer of the cervix

Seminars in Oncology Nursing, 1990
Since the introduction of the Papanicolaou smear and colposcopy, cervical cancers can be diagnosed and treated easily in their preinvasive state. Although theoretically cancer of the cervix should be detected and treated before becoming invasive disease, there are still too many women who develop invasive cancer of the cervix and require radical ...
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Cancer of the cervix

Seminars in Oncology Nursing, 2002
To review the advances in the diagnosis, evaluation, staging, and treatment of cervical cancer that have been made in the past 10 years, and identify the work that still needs to be done.Journal and review articles, book chapters, and research studies.Although cervical cancer has a preinvasive component and should be easily preventable, it has not been
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Cancer of the uterine cervix

Current Opinion in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1998
The overall five-year survival of cervical cancer is only 40% worldwide despite the development of effective screening modalities. Paramount to this issue is access to appropriate medical care which remains limited to high-risk populations throughout the world.
J, Elkas, R, Farias-Eisner
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CANCER of the CERVIX

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1958
LINNIE GRAY, entering upon a period of long-term therapy for a serious illness, faced the strange hospital world where she feared the loss of her identity in the bustle of hospital routine. She feared the possible pain and the unknown outcome of her treatment, and welcomed the security of a familiar face, an understanding listener, and a hand extended ...
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Imaging of cancer of the cervix

Radiologic Clinics of North America, 2002
Cancer of the endometrium is the most common invasive gynecologic malignancy in North America. Although transvaginal sonography is often the initial imaging examination in women with dysfunctional uterine bleeding, MRI offers multifactorial assessment once the diagnosis of endometrial cancer has been established.
Juergen, Scheidler, Andreas F, Heuck
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HIV and cancer of the cervix

Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 2005
Cancer of the cervix is the second most common cause of cancer-related death in women worldwide, and in some low resource countries accounts for the highest cancer mortality in women. The highest burden of the HIV/AIDS epidemic is currently in sub-Saharan Africa, where more than half of the people infected are women who have no access to cervical ...
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Prevention of cervix cancer

Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology, 2000
Cervix carcinoma is an important health problem world-wide, being the second most common cancer among women, ranking first in many developing countries. A number of important epidemiological risk factors have been identified as contributing to the development of CIN and invasive cervix carcinoma. Of key importance is infection with human papillomavirus
C L, Rock   +3 more
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Cancer of the Cervix

New England Journal of Medicine, 1966
The importance of mass screening for female carcinoma is documented once again, and the results of such a program within a small, closed island population are presented and discussed. A 63.4 per cent participation among 369 eligible females resulted in findings of a 3.0 per cent prevalence of uterine cancer--5 persons with cervical, 4 intraepithelial ...
B M, Rodenberger   +2 more
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The Dispersion of Cancer of the Cervix

Radiology, 1950
The more important of the several routes of dispersal in cancer of the cervix is not easy to establish, as occasional evidence of both direct and lymphatic spread is found in the grossly early clinical case. That the type and degree of dispersion are important in the selection of therapy is apparent, but the presence or absence of early extension is ...
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