Results 271 to 280 of about 796,161 (328)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Endocrine mucin‐producing sweat gland carcinoma: Clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular analysis of 11 cases with emphasis on MYB immunoexpression

Journal of cutaneous pathology, 2018
Endocrine mucin‐producing sweat gland carcinoma (EMPSGC) is a rare low‐grade primary cutaneous sweat gland carcinoma with predilection for the periorbital skin in elderly female patients.
L. Held   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Malignancies of the endocrine glands [PDF]

open access: possibleThe Japanese Journal of Surgery, 1983
Patients with malignant tumors of the endocrine system can be effectively treated by surgery, the 5 year survival rate varying between 30-90 per cent, depending on organ involvement. In the Federal Republic of Germany, 1 out every 5 persons dies as a result of malignancy.
Fritz Linder   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Endocrine glands in anencephaly

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 1973
Geographic and ethnic differences influence the incidence of anencephaly. This study was undertaken to assess the influence of such differences on the endocrine defects associated with anencephaly. All endocrine and exo-endocrine glands of ten human anencephalic monsters, conceived and born of South Indian parents in South India, and control specimens ...
Samir C. Mitra, G. Venkataraman
openaire   +3 more sources

The Endocrine Glands

1985
Among the endocrine glands, the pituitary is the most frequently affected in a manner giving rise to functional effects. The tendency of sarcoidosis to involve the meninges and neural structures at the base of the brain has been noted in Chapter 14. The variability of distribution and localization of hypothalamic-pituitary changes gives rise to a wide ...
J. G. Scadding, D. N. Mitchell
openaire   +2 more sources

Apoptosis in endocrine glands

Endocrine Pathology, 1995
Apoptosis or programmed cell death, is a phenomenon with ultrastructural and biochemical characteristics, which is thought to be distinctive from ordinary necrosis. Shrinkage of cells associated with crescent clumps of heterochromatin and formation of membrane-bound apoptotic bodies are thought to represent distinguishing morphologic features ...
George Kontogeorgos, Kalman Kovacs
openaire   +3 more sources

Endocrine Glands

2000
Publisher Summary The capacity of the mammalian organism to function as an integrated unit is made possible by two principal control mechanisms, the nervous system and the endocrine system. Although the endocrine system has been traditionally regarded as a system of glands capable of releasing chemical mediators, which act on targets distant from the ...
openaire   +4 more sources

The Endocrine Glands

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1974
This small handbook of endocrinology, prepared by a Yale internist and a pathologist, summarizes the interrelationship between the anatomical and functional disturbances for each organ. Written mostly on a table once used by Reverend Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), the book is described by the authors as somewhat less clever than Alice in Wonderland ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The Endocrine Glands

1987
Many of the induced changes in the endocrine system are a result of interference with feedback control mechanisms and as such are often predictable. However, some lesions also occur which are due to direct toxic effects.
D. J. Lewis, C. Gopinath, D. E. Prentice
openaire   +2 more sources

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