Results 231 to 240 of about 177,002 (249)
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Comprehensive Physiology, 2016
The gallbladder stores and concentrates bile between meals. Gallbladder motor function is regulated by bile acids via the membrane bile acid receptor, TGR5, and by neurohormonal signals linked to digestion, for example, cholecystokinin and FGF15/19 ...
C. Housset+3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The gallbladder stores and concentrates bile between meals. Gallbladder motor function is regulated by bile acids via the membrane bile acid receptor, TGR5, and by neurohormonal signals linked to digestion, for example, cholecystokinin and FGF15/19 ...
C. Housset+3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Gallbladder Symptoms and the Roentgenographically Normal Gallbladder
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1974AMONG the common abdominal diseases, cholecystitis, acute and chronic, has the reputation as the easiest to recognize on the basis of history and physical examination. Prior to objective studies, the clinician is likely to feel more confident about his working diagnosis of gallbladder disease than that of such problems as gastric or duodenal ulcer ...
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Malacoplakia of the gallbladder
Human Pathology, 1983A case of malacoplakia of the gallbladder is described. The cytoplasm of histiocytes in the gallbladder wall was filled with granules positive for periodic acid-Schiff, von Kossa's, and Perls' stains, which is highly suggestive of malacoplakia. Both local inflammation and recent neoplasia could have played a role in the histogenesis of the malacoplakia.
Bognel C+4 more
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1981
The liver forms initially as a diverticulum from the endoderm of the mid-gut around the 25th day of gestation. It develops by dichotomous branching after giving off an unpaired diverticulum, the future gallbladder. Extending into the mesenchyme of the septum transversum, which gives rise to the interstitial tissues and capsule, the irregularly arranged
Jean W. Keeling, Colin L. Berry
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The liver forms initially as a diverticulum from the endoderm of the mid-gut around the 25th day of gestation. It develops by dichotomous branching after giving off an unpaired diverticulum, the future gallbladder. Extending into the mesenchyme of the septum transversum, which gives rise to the interstitial tissues and capsule, the irregularly arranged
Jean W. Keeling, Colin L. Berry
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Medical Oncology, 2010
Lymphomatous involvement of the gallbladder is extremely rare. We report on a 69-year-old woman with a history of an indolent non-Hodgkin's lymphoma who was found to have a new gallbladder lesion on surveillance CT scan. The mass was resected and proved to be a follicular lymphoma with the same immunohistochemical characteristics as her original tumor ...
Zain Khalpey+2 more
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Lymphomatous involvement of the gallbladder is extremely rare. We report on a 69-year-old woman with a history of an indolent non-Hodgkin's lymphoma who was found to have a new gallbladder lesion on surveillance CT scan. The mass was resected and proved to be a follicular lymphoma with the same immunohistochemical characteristics as her original tumor ...
Zain Khalpey+2 more
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Gastroenterology, 1950
Summary 1.Carcinoma of the gallbladder is not a rare disease. Cholelithiasis and cholecystitis are common antecedents, and one to ten per cent of this category may have biliary cancer depending upon the decade of life. 2.The concept of "silent stone" should receive no lenient interpretation in the individual patient, regardless of age.
Irving L. Lichtenstein+3 more
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Summary 1.Carcinoma of the gallbladder is not a rare disease. Cholelithiasis and cholecystitis are common antecedents, and one to ten per cent of this category may have biliary cancer depending upon the decade of life. 2.The concept of "silent stone" should receive no lenient interpretation in the individual patient, regardless of age.
Irving L. Lichtenstein+3 more
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Perforation of the gallbladder
The American Journal of Surgery, 1960Abstract In 2 per cent of the cases of acute cholecystitis at Saint Francis Hospital, perforation occurred. Most of these perforations were subacute, with abscess formation. Perforation should be suspected in the older patient with cholecystitis which is not subsiding within four to six days of onset. Treatment consists of preparation of the patient
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Surgical Clinics of North America, 1973
Because primary carcinoma of the gallbladder is asymptomatic in its early, potentially curable stages, three-fourths of patients have unresectable disease at the time of surgical evaluation; for the others, the lesion is found most often incidentally during operations for calculus disease.
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Because primary carcinoma of the gallbladder is asymptomatic in its early, potentially curable stages, three-fourths of patients have unresectable disease at the time of surgical evaluation; for the others, the lesion is found most often incidentally during operations for calculus disease.
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