Results 301 to 310 of about 99,788 (345)
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Cutaneous malignant melanoma in the young

British Journal of Plastic Surgery, 1986
Cutaneous malignant melanoma in children and adolescents is rare. Of over 1600 patients documented in the Melanoma Registry at Frenchay Hospital from 1967 onwards, only 29 cases are recorded who were 21 years of age or younger. Of these, four patients were pre-pubertal (13 years or less) and none arose from a congenital "giant" naevus. Fifteen patients
A L, Moss, J C, Briggs
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Autophagy in cutaneous malignant melanoma

Journal of Cutaneous Pathology, 2009
We show that malignant melanoma cells display high levels of autophagy, a cytoplasmic process of protein and organelle digestion that provides an energy source in times of nutrient deprivation. In a panel of 12 cases of cutaneous malignant melanoma of the superficial spreading type, cells in florid melanoma in situ (MIS) and invasive cells in the ...
Rossitza, Lazova   +2 more
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Melanoma and Other Cutaneous Malignancies

2001
Cancers of the skin constituted nearly one-half of all cancers diagnosed in 1999, at least 1,000,000 new cases in the United States alone. In fact, the skin is by far the most common primary site for human cancer development. Although skin cancer is often thought of as causing relatively little morbidity and mortality, nearly 10,000 deaths were ...
Vernon K. Sondak, Kim A. Margolin
openaire   +1 more source

Primary cutaneous malignant melanoma

Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1983
The prognosis of localized malignant melanoma is related to several histologic features of the primary lesion. Growth pattern, level of invasion, and tumor thickness are currently most widely used in clinical practice, but other features, including ulceration, mitotic rate, density of the inflammatory response, evidence of partial regression ...
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Cutaneous malignant melanoma

Current Problems in Dermatology, 1993
Abstract Malignant melanoma is the leading cause of death as a result of skin disease in the United States. The incidence of melanoma has increased exponentially during the last two decades, and the disease is now the eighth most common cause of cancer in the United States, with an estimated annual incidence of approximately 13 per 100,000.
Stephen J. Hoffman   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Malignant melanoma of the vulva: An extension of cutaneous melanoma?

Gynecologic Oncology, 2011
To determine the prognostic significance of the 2002 revisions of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) Staging System for cutaneous melanoma in melanoma of the vulva and review the current surgical utilized for treatment of this neoplasm.Demographic, surgical and outcomes data were obtained from the records of vulvar melanoma patients treated ...
K M, Moxley   +9 more
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Cutaneous malignant melanoma

Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1987
A W, Kopf, J C, Maize
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Cutaneous Malignant Melanoma

2011
Cutaneous malignant melanoma is the fourth leading cancer type in men and the fifth in women in the USA. It is readily curable in early stages but in the disseminated state, it carries a grave prognosis. Melanoma occurs more frequently in white adults, with peak incidence during the fourth and fifth decades of life melanoma is rare in dark-skinned
José A. Peñagarícano   +1 more
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Angiogenesis in cutaneous malignant melanoma

1997
The capacity of cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) to induce angiogenesis is well established. Tumor vascularity was compared for radial versus vertical growth phase melanomas. The radial growth phase is defined as melanoma that is predominantly intraepidermal, but usually exhibits microinvasion in papillary dermis.
ZAMOLO G   +5 more
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Cutaneous malignant melanoma

Clinics in Dermatology, 2001
D, Reintgen, C W, Cruse, M, Atkins
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