Results 311 to 320 of about 825,443 (336)
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Recognizing Congenital Heart Diseases
Postgraduate Medicine, 1972Mortality among infants with congenital heart disease is high, especially in the first month of life, and some of these disorders may be fatal suddenly. Diagnosis is based on clinical signs, which vary with the age of the patient and the severity of the lesion.
E K, Chung, G H, Khoury
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Sporadic Congenital Caffey's Disease
Clinical Pediatrics, 1987Caffey's disease is an inflammatory skeletal disorder of infancy manifested clinically by fever, soft-tissue swelling, and constitutional signs with radiographic evidence of periosteal new bone formation. Although prevalent between 1940 and 1960, nonfamilial cases have become extraordinarily rare.
G S, Marshall +2 more
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Imaging Congenital Heart Disease
Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1990When defined in a broad sense, imaging is the most important aspect of modern pediatric cardiovascular medicine. Definition of anatomic defects is now accurately and easily obtained with physical inspection, x-ray technology (including roentgenology, fluoroscopy, and cineangiography), and echocardiography. Echocardiography, with the addition of Doppler
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Congenital Letterer-Siwe Disease
Beiträge zur Pathologie, 1974Summary An acute fulminating case of Letterer-Siwe disease in a newborn female is reported. The infant died 11 days after birth. Autopsy findings revealed advanced Letterer-Siwe disease indicating that the illness had its origin during intrauterine life.
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Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1989
S M, Ramin, M C, Maberry, L C, Gilstrap
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S M, Ramin, M C, Maberry, L C, Gilstrap
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