Results 171 to 180 of about 14,157 (210)
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Full-Thickness Eye Wall Resection of Choroidal Neoplasms
Ophthalmology, 1979Sclerochorioretinal (full-thickness eye wall) resection was performed in 19 eyes with choroidal neoplasms. Thirteen of these eyes have retained useful vision, ranging from 20/25 to counting fingers. Six eyes had intraoperative and postoperative complications that have led to enucleation.
G A, Peyman, M, Raichand
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Childhood choroid plexus neoplasms
European Journal of Pediatrics, 1983Fourteen children less than 2 years old with choroid plexus papilloma (CPP) were studied. Of these patients nine had the tumor in the lateral ventricles (LV), three in the fourth ventricle (4th V), one in the third ventricle (3rd V) and one in the third and left lateral ventricle (LLV).
I, Pascual-Castroviejo +4 more
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Pediatric choroid plexus neoplasms: MR, CT, and pathologic correlation.
Radiology, 1989Choroid plexus papillomas are rare, constituting approximately 0.5% of all intracranial neoplasms. Four benign choroid plexus papillomas and one choroid plexus carcinoma were retrospectively reviewed in patients aged 4-20 months who had been examined with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging with a field strength of 0.5 T or 1.0 T and with computed ...
T L, Coates +6 more
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Fourth Ventricular Choroid Plexus Neoplasms in Childhood
Pediatric Neurosurgery, 2008Choroid plexus neoplasms (CPN) are rare tumors occurring with a relative incidence of 0.5% of intracranial neoplasms in all age groups and 1.5–6.4% of all pediatric brain tumors. In children, the most common site of origin is the atria of the lateral ventricles where the CPN may represent either a carcinoma or a benign papilloma.
Elida Vazquez +4 more
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A marker for primary choroid plexus neoplasms.
The American journal of pathology, 1990Primary choroid plexus (CP) tumors are rare neoplasms that present in childhood or, less frequently, in adult life. The majority are benign and amenable to complete surgical excision, but occasionally more invasive variants are encountered. Although generally pathologically distinct, occasionally primary CP neoplasms may be difficult to distinguish ...
J, Herbert, T, Cavallaro, A J, Dwork
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Transthyretin immunoreactivity in choroid plexus neoplasms and brain metastases.
Modern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc, 1992Although choroid plexus papillomas (CPP) and primary choroid plexus carcinomas (CPC) are rare neoplasms of the central nervous system, they have been the subject of a number of immunohistochemical studies. To date, no unique or specific marker for these neoplasms has been found, however.
S, Albrecht +3 more
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Differential diagnosis of choroidal neoplasms.
Oncology (Williston Park, N.Y.), 1991Experienced ophthalmologists who appropriately employ ancillary diagnostic testing, including fluorescein angiography, ocular ultrasonography, MRI, and fine needle aspiration biopsy, are remarkably accurate in the diagnosis of intraocular neoplasms. Recognizing the classic clinical features of the more commonly encountered lesions, such as choroidal ...
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[Choroid metastasis consequence of breast neoplasm].
Oftalmologia (Bucharest, Romania : 1990), 2004The paper presents a clinical case of a 46 years old woman with metastatic carcinoma the leading point being breast and the therapeutical modalities taken in this situation.
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Neoplasm of the Choroid Plexus of the Left Lateral Ventricle
Journal of Neurosurgery, 1948H, WILKINS, R, SMITH, B, HALPERT
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