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Idiopathic cyst, juxta-articular and related cysts, epidermoid cyst, hydatid cyst
1998Cysts (from Greek kustis: bladder) are not tumours, but in pathology the term covers a number of disparate entities; in bone pathology they share a very similar radiological image. The relative specificity of the radiological image and the particular circumstances of their development are the justification for surgical biopsy.
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1990
Tubular dilatation to the point of cyst formation is found in a number of disease entities. It involves epithelial hyperplasia and fluid accumulation, preceded by cell injury. Hyperplasia in the cyst wall takes many forms and is commonly accompanied by inflammatory cell infiltration and tubular atrophy.
J. A. McAteer, A. P. Evan
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Tubular dilatation to the point of cyst formation is found in a number of disease entities. It involves epithelial hyperplasia and fluid accumulation, preceded by cell injury. Hyperplasia in the cyst wall takes many forms and is commonly accompanied by inflammatory cell infiltration and tubular atrophy.
J. A. McAteer, A. P. Evan
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Anadolu Kardiyoloji Dergisi/The Anatolian Journal of Cardiology, 2012
Soe Moe Aung+3 more
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Soe Moe Aung+3 more
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Colloid Cyst and Epidermoid Cyst
Pediatric Neurosurgery, 2001Karl Kothbauer+2 more
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Cysts (Skene’s Duct Cyst) [PDF]
The female urethra develops from the urogenital sinus which is surrounded by cuboidal cell-lined glands. These glands are equivalent to the prostatic glands in men. They, except for the ones which form Skene’s duct, regress in women. Another group of glands lined by squamous cells develops as a prolongation of the epithelium of the vaginal canal. These,
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Cysts and Cyst-like Conditions
1990The inclusion cysts of the vagina are similar to the epidermal cysts of the vulva. They occur following trauma, vaginal or utero-vaginal surgery. The cysts are usually 1-4 cm in size, seen often near the introitus, vaults, lateral and posterior wall of the vagina.
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