Results 221 to 230 of about 16,330 (249)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Ultrasound in cryosurgery

Clinics in Dermatology, 1990
Abstract Cryosurgery is a blind therapeutic method for which it is not possible routinely to remove destroyed tissue for histologic examination. Therefore, some questions have to be answered in doing cryosurgery: The first question is the diagnosis of the lesion to be treated.
Ronald Hicks   +2 more
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Cryosurgery for hemorrhoids

Diseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1976
The main disadvantage of cryosurgery in my experience has been the amount of postoperative pain suffered by many of the patients, which is much greater than had been anticipated from previous accounts of the method and which unfortunately incapacitate most patients for work for at least several days or a week after the treatment.
openaire   +3 more sources

Abdominal Cryosurgery: Pancreas Cryosurgery

2001
Years 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.
Tatjana B. Komkova   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Abdominal Cryosurgery: Hepatic Cryosurgery

2001
Hepatic 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 ...
Franz Sellner   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Cryosurgery of the Anus

Southern Medical Journal, 1977
To further study the effectiveness of cryosurgery of the anus, cryolesions were produced in the rectum of pigs and healing was followed by microangiography and histologic study. In addition, cryosurgery was used on 105 patients (35 as outpatients) with anal pathologic lesions.
B Myers, W Donovan
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CRYOSURGERY OF MIGRAINE [PDF]

open access: possibleHeadache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 1973
IN MARCH, 1968 DURING the course of an operation on the nasal Septum which obstructed most of the left side of the nose, a 2.75 mm. cryosurgical probe was used to freeze with caution the Sphenopalatine area on the same side. His main complaint was episodic severe left orbital and Maxillary pain with freedom between attacks.
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Cryosurgery of Headache

1978
The use of cryosurgery applied to the sphenopalatine area (artery and ganglion) plus the superficial temporal and occipital branches of the external carotid artery has proven worthwhile in a majority of patients in whom this procedure has been used since 1968.
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Cryosurgery in Ophthalmology

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1967
THE USE of controlled low temperatures in eye surgery has been one of the exciting developments of the last few years. Ophthalmic cryosurgery is so new that it is still finding its place in our armamentarium. We can only evaluate it today in the light of our experiences to date realizing full well that further studies will call for reassessment ...
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History of cryosurgery

Seminars in Surgical Oncology, 1998
The use of freezing temperatures for the therapeutic destruction of tissue began in England in 1845-51 when James Arnott described the use of iced salt solutions (about-20 degrees C) to freeze advanced cancers in accessible sites, producing reduction in tumor size and amelioration of pain.
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