Results 211 to 220 of about 16,921 (236)
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Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1994
Cryosurgery is an effective modality for treatment of many benign, premalignant, and malignant cutaneous lesions. New indications for benign lesions, new data, and recent trends towards more aggressive treatment of malignant lesions are mentioned. The differences in management between benign and malignant lesions are addressed.
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Cryosurgery is an effective modality for treatment of many benign, premalignant, and malignant cutaneous lesions. New indications for benign lesions, new data, and recent trends towards more aggressive treatment of malignant lesions are mentioned. The differences in management between benign and malignant lesions are addressed.
openaire +2 more sources
Abdominal Cryosurgery: Pancreas Cryosurgery
2001Years of experience with cryosurgery for the removal of benign and malignant tumors have shown that it is possible successfully to convert a tumor into a solid necrotic mass, thus facilitating its removal. This makes avascular resection of the tumor possible, without removing it, and with little or no blood loss during this procedure.
Nikolai N. Korpan +3 more
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Abdominal Cryosurgery: Hepatic Cryosurgery
2001Hepatic cryosurgery is at present successfully used in medical practice both as an independent treatment and as a component of other treatments in the field of oncology. Tumors are destroyed by shock-freezing. New scientific research on freezing techniques in the fields of biology and medicine, as well as numerous theoretical and experimental studies ...
Nikolai N. Korpan +4 more
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Surgical technology international, 2005
The in situ destruction of malignant tissue by freezing is a relatively new addition to the list of treatment options for patients with cancer in solid organs. Although skin cancers have long been treated by cryosurgery, the lack of suitable equipment for both delivering and monitoring the freezing process hindered further development of the treatment ...
S J, Dwerryhouse +2 more
openaire +1 more source
The in situ destruction of malignant tissue by freezing is a relatively new addition to the list of treatment options for patients with cancer in solid organs. Although skin cancers have long been treated by cryosurgery, the lack of suitable equipment for both delivering and monitoring the freezing process hindered further development of the treatment ...
S J, Dwerryhouse +2 more
openaire +1 more source

