Results 221 to 230 of about 61,215 (262)
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A radiological review of duodenal disease

Irish Journal of Medical Science, 1971
A REVIEW of 664 cases of duodenal disease seen over the past few years is presented. The lesions are divided into peptic and non-peptic. In the demonstration of duodenal ulcers the value of the supine oblique air contrast view is stressed. The non-peptic lesions are divided by cause into intrinsic and extrinsic. The extrinsic lesions are listed but not
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[The duodenal epithelium in duodenal diseases].

Klinicheskaia meditsina, 2005
The purpose of the study was to define duodenal epithelial function in duodenal diseases and to assess the potentialities of correction of detected dysfunctions. The electrical properties (EPs) of the duodenal epithelium were explored in patients with primary chronic duodenitis, duodenal peptic ulcer (DPU) on an exacerbation and in the late ...
A M, Korepanov   +3 more
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Duodenal loop widening in pancreatic diseases

Clinical Radiology, 1978
The magnitude of the duodenal loop in patients with a variety of pancreas-associated disease has been accurately measured and compared with those values encountered in a series of normal subjects in order to assess if any widening had occurred. Using a Student's t-test all the patients with pancreatic disease were indistinguishable from the control ...
J P, Owen, M J, Keir
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Cigarette Smoking and Duodenal-Ulcer Disease

New England Journal of Medicine, 1972
Smoking has been associated with many pathologic processes in and outside the respiratory system; but whether smoking causes a disease, whether smoking and the disease result from common causes, or...
T E, Solomon, E D, Jacobson
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Scalloping of Duodenal Mucosa in Crohn's Disease

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, 2004
Abstract Scalloping of the duodenal mucosal folds is an endoscopic finding of small bowel mucosal pathology that is generally due to villous atrophy. Though it can be seen in many disease processes, it is most commonly associated with celiac disease.
Andrea, Culliford   +3 more
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Risk of Duodenal Adenoma in Celiac Disease

Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology, 2003
There is a 60- to 80-fold increased risk of small-bowel adenocarcinoma in patients with celiac disease. While the adenoma-carcinoma sequence appears to operate in the small bowel as in the large bowel, the risk of duodenal adenomas in celiac patients is unknown.The records of 381 patients (245 F, 136 M) with biopsy-proven celiac disease were reviewed ...
S Devi, Rampertab   +3 more
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Ulcerative Duodenitis in a Child with Celiac Disease

The Journal of Pediatrics, 2011
Figure 2. Duodenal ulcer with underlying crypt hypoplasia. A 15-month-old boy presented with a 2-month history of weight loss, vomiting, and extreme irritability on feeding. He had been having one formed bowel movement per day. Physical examination revealed an irritable, thin, sallow-appearing toddler with a distended abdomen.
Richard L, Mones, Geraldine O, Mercer
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Miscellaneous Duodenal Diseases

2014
Various lesions in duodenum not covered elsewhere are included in the miscellaneous territory and described in this chapter. Endoscopic and clinical findings are presented as needed. These lesions may be related with specific clinical situations such as systemic illness like Henoch-Schonlein purpura or portal hypertension.
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Gastric and Duodenal Diseases

1981
These diseases are probably the cause of the major amount of epigastric distress experienced by humans. The reason the word “probably” must be stressed is that academicians still remain confused concerning the significance of abnormalities observed on both endoscopic and histologic evaluation of gastric mucosa in patients suffering from the symptoms ...
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Psychosomatic factors in duodenal ulcer disease

Brain Research Bulletin, 1980
Psychological factors may play an important role in peptic ulcer disease, but this has not yet been proven. The psychosomatic theory suggests than an unconscious conflict, by some yet unknown route, results in an increase in acid-pepsin secretion or a decrease in resistance of the duodenal mucosa, thereby upsetting the normal balance between injurious ...
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