Results 311 to 320 of about 194,648 (336)
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Endometriosis of the ileum

The American Journal of Digestive Diseases, 1948
1. A case of endometriosis involving the terminal ileum with early obstruction is presented.
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Eosinophilic Granuloma of the Ileum

Archives of Surgery, 1959
Interest in eosinophilic infiltrations of the gastrointestinal tract dates back to 1937, when Kaijser 1 first reported three cases. However, it was not until 1949 that Vanek 2 reported six cases occurring in the stomach and established this condition as a clinicalpathological entity. He originally described the lesion as consisting of connective tissue
Alexis E. Lubchenco   +2 more
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Perforation of the Ileum

Archives of Surgery, 1972
Perforation of the terminal ileum occurred in 163 patients. Although the cause of this acute abdominal catastrophy, still common in Asia and Africa, is not clear, the typical macrophage reaction of typhoid fever was seen in five of eight carefully studied patients. In only one of the five patients, the typhoid organisms grew from a culture.
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The Ileum Following Colectomy

Radiology, 1955
The surgical removal of all or the greater part of the large intestine is done to relieve symptoms resulting from extensive disease of the colon. The ileum may be anastomosed with the sigmoid, the rectum, or the anus, or may be brought out through the skin to form a permanent ileostomy. A number of writers (1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 10, 12, 13) have observed that,
Ross Golden, Samuel H. Madell
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Segmental dilatation of the ileum

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1977
Three new cases of congenital segmental dilatation of the ileum are presented and added to 12 cases of segmental dilatation found in the literature. The aspect of the condition which is of particular interest is the presence in 3 of the dilated segments of heteroplastic foregut derivatives of unusual varieties.
James Lister, Irene M. Irving
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ENDOSCOPY OF THE TERMINAL ILEUM

The Lancet, 1984
A prospective study was undertaken to investigate the feasibility and diagnostic yield of ileoscopy as an extension of total colonoscopy. The distal 15 to 40 cm of the terminal ileum were visualized in 400 of 555 consecutive patients submitted to total colonoscopy (72 percent).
G. Schmidt, Gereon Börsch
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Jejunum and Ileum

2020
During development, there is physiologic herniation of the midgut into the umbilical cord, and it then slips back in with a counterclockwise rotation. Jejunum and ileum occupy the mid abdomen and pelvis. The jejunum is involved in calcium and magnesium absorption. The ileum contains lymphoid tissue at the antimesenteric border.
Jad M. Abdelsattar   +4 more
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Diverticulosis of the Jejunum and Ileum

Radiology, 1946
Diverticula are known to occur in practically every portion of the digestive tract. They are most common in the colon and are frequently found, also, in the esophagus and duodenum. Diverticulosis of the small bowel, however, is rare. A recent report by Benson, Dixon, and Waugh (1) states that at the Mayo Clinic, from 1909 to 1942, inclusive, there ...
Paul J. Votta, Max Ritvo
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Follicular lymphoblastoma of the ileum

The American Journal of Surgery, 1953
Abstract Follicular lymphoblastoma is a systemic disease which may rarely become evident initially in the small bowel. Diagnosis can be made only by exploration. The treatment of isolated small bowel involvement is wide excision followed by x-ray therapy and observation for further evidence of the disease.
F.Robert Mizer   +2 more
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Segmental dilatation of the ileum

The British Journal of Radiology, 1984
One of the rarer causes of intestinal obstruction in the neonatal period is segmental dilatation of the ileum. The case histories, radiological and histological details of four patients are presented together with a short review of the literature.
Anita Brown, Helen Carty
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