Results 141 to 150 of about 5,571 (160)
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Treatment of cystic hygroma

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1976
To determine ideal treatment, 58 patients with cystic hygroma of the neck were studied. Approximately equal distribution of the lesion among sexes and sides of the neck was noted, but frequency was less than expected among blacks. Complete excision, the treatment of choice, gave an 81% cure rate.
B V, Stromberg, P M, Weeks, R C, Wray
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Subdural hygroma associated with axillary cystic hygroma

Journal of Pediatric Neurology, 2015
We present a case of a 4-month-old girl with a history of a huge axillary cystic hygroma since birth, with elective surgical resection of the lesion and subsequent development of infection at the surgery site. During hospitalization for the infection, she developed seizures, a bulging fontanelle, increased head circumference, and widely separated ...
Joseph Piatt   +6 more
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HYGROMA COLLI CYSTICUM AND HYGROMA AXILLARE

Archives of Surgery, 1938
Hygroma, derived from the Greek hygros (moist) and oma (tumor), is a term which has often been used loosely to include various types of cysts containing a thin watery fluid. The designation cavernous lymphangioma has frequently been applied to the cystic form of this tumor. In a stricter sense, hygroma should be limited to multilocular cystic tumors of
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HYGROMA CYSTICUM COLLI AND HYGROMA AXILLARE

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1914
Case 1.—History. —My first case of hygroma cysticum colli, or at least the first one in which the condition was recognized, occurred in J. R., aged 12, of Winsted, the patient being referred to me by Dr. David Reidy. The family history was irrelevant. The patient had pneumonia at 9 and meningitis at 18 months.
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Cystic hygroma

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1959
F W, FULLER, H, CONWAY
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Cystic hygroma

European Journal of Pediatric Dermatology, 2017
Cystic hygroma is a cavernous deep lymphangioma characterized by the presence of few large cystic cavities often separated by a dense fibrous septum. The most characteristic localization of the neck seems to be related to the presence of a large lymph sac in the neck at the side of the jugular veins in which the main lymphatic ducts – the right and the
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TRAUMATIC SUBDURAL HYGROMA

The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care, 1973
J, Hoff   +4 more
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Cystic Hygroma

Surgical Clinics of North America, 1963
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SUBDURAL, HYGROMA

Medical Journal of Australia, 1958
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