Results 241 to 250 of about 249,860 (310)

Neoplasms and the heart

open access: closed, 2023
Kyle W. Klarich, Joseph J. Maleszewskic
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Primary neoplasms of the heart

Experimental Pathology, 1981
Summary A report about a primary neoplasm of the heart in the rat representing a rare schwannomais presented and compared with the literature.
G, Bode, F, Hartig
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SECONDARY NEOPLASMS OF THE HEART

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1954
TRADITIONALLY, metastases to the heart have been considered to be a clinical curiosity or an incidental finding at the autopsy table. At the Laboratory of Experimental Oncology we have had the opportunity to follow to necropsy 288 patients with advanced neoplastic disease of wide variety.
R C, BURNETT, M B, SHIMKIN
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Neoplasms of the Heart

1985
Neoplasms of the heart may be divided into primary (benign or malignant) and secondary (metastatic). Primary cardiac neoplasms are rare, but may occur at any age. The majority are benign, the most common being the myxoma, which develops as a polypoid mass usually arising from the left atrium (LA).
Hugo Spindola-Franco, Bernard G. Fish
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[Primary heart neoplasms].

Khirurgiia, 1994
The work analyses the anatomomorphological characteristics of primary tumors of the heart in 106 patients; in 101 patients the tumor was benign (myxoma, neurinoma, rhabdomyoma) and in 5 malignant (angiosarcoma, liposarcoma). Surgical treatment was conducted in 99 patients; hospital lethality was 7.1%. Six patients who refused an operation died at other
M A, Nechaenko   +4 more
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PRIMARY NEOPLASMS OF THE HEART

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1928
Primary rhabdomyosarcoma of the heart in an adult has not yet been reported in the literature. It is our purpose in this paper to report such a case and to discuss briefly primary tumors of the heart. The literature of this subject has been reviewed by Perlstein,1Goldstein,2Beck and Thatcher,3Nowicki4and Morris,5who gives comprehensive references to ...
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Neoplasms of the Heart and Pericardium

1987
Neoplasms of the cardiovascular system are identical to tumours elsewhere in the body and the reader is referred to specialized texts. Tumours of the heart and pericardium are exceedingly rare. An incidence of 0.028% has been reported1. The ratio of malignant to benign neoplasms in the heart is 1: 3 and in the pericardium 1:12.
E. G. J. Olsen, R. A. Florio
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[Heart pathology of extracardiac origin. VII. Heart and neoplasms].

Revista espanola de cardiologia, 1998
Cardiac alterations of neoplastic diseases can be due to direct invasion produced by primary cardiac tumors or more frequently secondary to local compression of vascular structures by extracardiac neoplasms, such as superior vena cava syndrome. One of the most important alterations is the cardiotoxicity of anticancer treatments, either chemotherapy ...
J, Calzas, P, Lianes, H, Cortés-Funes
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[Pulmonary neoplasms in patients with heart transplantation].

open access: closedLa Radiologia medica, 1992
A, la Fianza   +3 more
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[Computerized tomography in the diagnosis of heart neoplasms].

Sovetskaia meditsina, 1991
Computed tomography (CT) was used to study 56 and 4 patients with primary and secondary cardiac blastomas, respectively. CT allows differentiation between a racemose and dense endocardial tumor, localization of myxoma pedicle, recording its prolapse into the adjacent chamber, identification of extra-, intracardiac and intramyocardial tumor growth as ...
I Kh, Rabkin   +3 more
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