Results 321 to 330 of about 85,387 (344)
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Melanocytoma of the Conjunctiva

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1974
A 15-year-old girl was born with a unilateral pigmented lesion of the conjunctiva. The patient has been observed for 11 years, showing very slow but steady progression of the pigmentation. The tumor mass was biopsied and studied with light and electron microscopy.
Luis Strozzi   +2 more
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Myxomas of the Conjunctiva

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1986
Fourteen cases of rare conjunctival myxoma were studied clinicopathologically. The median age of the eight men and six women was 50 years (range, 18 to 76 years). The tumors appeared as slowly growing, freely movable solitary lesions located primarily in the temporal bulbar conjunctiva. The clinical diagnosis was cyst in many cases.
Ahmed A. Hidayat, Jacob Pe'er
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Melanomas of the Conjunctiva

International Ophthalmology Clinics, 1980
Conjunctival melanomas are much less common than custaneous melanomas. Consequently, the classification and treatment of these mucosal tumors is more controversial than that of skin tumors. Conjunctival melanomas can be simply classified into tumors that are superficial and develop in a radial-growth phase, and those that are invasive and develop in a ...
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Leiomyosarcoma of the Conjunctiva

Ophthalmology, 1991
The clinical, light microscopic, immunohistologic, and ultrastructural findings of a leiomyosarcoma of the conjunctiva are presented. This tumor was diagnosed after a 26-year history and is the first to be adequately documented as having arisen in the conjunctiva.
Jack Rootman   +3 more
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Nevi on the Conjunctiva

2004
The conjunctiva is frequently involved by congenital and acquired benign melanocytic proliferations. The entities we discuss herein are: congenital, racial and acquired epithelial pigmentations, ocular-dermal melanocytoses and melanocytic nevi.
Philip E. LeBoit, Guido Massi
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Filaria conjunctivae

Ophthalmologica, 1985
A conjunctival neoformation, excised in a 44-year-old healthy Italian man, was histologically diagnosed as Dirofilaria conjunctivae, which is probably Dirofilaria repens, a natural parasite found in dogs of European countries. This parasite rarely infests man in subcutaneous tissues, palpebral, orbital or conjunctival regions. In this case, as in those
J G, Orsoni, G, Coggiola, P, Minazzi
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Surgery of the Conjunctiva

2008
Dry eye is characterized by aqueous tear deficiency or excessive tear evaporation at the ocular surface, both leading to tear film instability that results in ocular surface epithelial damage. In addition to the lacrimal gland, the meibomian gland, cornea, and conjunctiva also contribute to the formation of the tear film via the production of goblet ...
Norihiko Yokoi   +2 more
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Ophthalmooestriasis conjunctivae

Ophthalmologica, 1986
A case of ophthalmooestriasis externa in a young woman is presented. The natural hosts of Oestrus ovis are sheep and goat. Occasionally man serves as intermediate host but then the larvae cannot mature. These larvae can give rise to a varying degree of inflammatory reactions of the conjunctiva. As the O.
L A, de Vries, O P, van Bijsterveld
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Conjunctiva

2009
Myron Yanoff, Joseph W. Sassani
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DISEASES OF THE CONJUNCTIVA

1967
Publisher Summary The conjunctiva is divided into bulbar and tarsal portions. The bulbar portion covers the anterior third of the eyeball, and is loosely attached to the sclerotic except at the limbus, where it merges with the corneal epithelium. The tarsal portion is firmly adhered. The nerve supply of the tarsal portion is from the nerves of the lid
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