Results 301 to 310 of about 8,354,394 (348)
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Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 2001
Patients with clinically diagnosed dysplastic nevi or a family history of melanoma with or without histologically diagnosed dysplastic nevi seem to be at higher risk for the development of multiple melanomas.Our purpose was to determine which factors increased the risk for the development of subsequent melanomas.This was a retrospective study in 56 ...
J J, Stam-Posthuma +4 more
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Patients with clinically diagnosed dysplastic nevi or a family history of melanoma with or without histologically diagnosed dysplastic nevi seem to be at higher risk for the development of multiple melanomas.Our purpose was to determine which factors increased the risk for the development of subsequent melanomas.This was a retrospective study in 56 ...
J J, Stam-Posthuma +4 more
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The American Journal of Surgery, 1966
Abstract A patient with four clinically distinct primary neoplasms is reported. Although instances of quadruple malignancy are uncommon, the incidence of more than one primary tumor in the same patient approaches 6 per cent. This incidence makes mandatory the careful evaluation and biopsy of all “recurrences” with the awareness that a significant ...
J N, Baldwin, R, Wisner
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Abstract A patient with four clinically distinct primary neoplasms is reported. Although instances of quadruple malignancy are uncommon, the incidence of more than one primary tumor in the same patient approaches 6 per cent. This incidence makes mandatory the careful evaluation and biopsy of all “recurrences” with the awareness that a significant ...
J N, Baldwin, R, Wisner
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Archives of Surgery, 1966
MULTIPLE primary malignancies were considered rare and unusual when first described by Billroth 1 in 1879. As subsequent authors have shown, 2,3 they are relatively common. The surgeon should be aware of their frequent sites and behavior. In order to delineate these important factors in relation to multiple malignancies, patients with multiple ...
B L, Bachulis, R D, Williams
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MULTIPLE primary malignancies were considered rare and unusual when first described by Billroth 1 in 1879. As subsequent authors have shown, 2,3 they are relatively common. The surgeon should be aware of their frequent sites and behavior. In order to delineate these important factors in relation to multiple malignancies, patients with multiple ...
B L, Bachulis, R D, Williams
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Dermatologic Surgery, 1999
Incidence rates of cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) have been increasing for decades among Caucasian populations worldwide. Multiple factors identify persons at increased risk of CMM, including those with a family history of melanoma and those with atypical moles.
N, Conrad +6 more
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Incidence rates of cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) have been increasing for decades among Caucasian populations worldwide. Multiple factors identify persons at increased risk of CMM, including those with a family history of melanoma and those with atypical moles.
N, Conrad +6 more
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Multiple Primary Malignant Neoplasms
Journal of Urology, 1984AbstractA 75‐year‐old man developed neurilemmoma of the left eighth cranial nerve, adenomatous polyp of the sigmoid colon, adenocarcinoma of the prostate, mixed cell type lymphoma of the right neck, and infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the right breast metachronously during a period of 38 years. The cancer of the right breast occurred 7 years after the
S S, Lee, B K, Wasiljew, K T, Song
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Multiple primary malignant tumors
Gastroenterology, 1987Members of colon cancer-prone nonpolyposis families who had multiple primary malignant tumors were analyzed to determine the frequencies, locations, and stages of their cancers, and the duration of their survival. Colon cancers tended to be more proximal, were in a less advanced stage than in the general population, and in a majority of instances were ...
V S, Swaroop +3 more
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Multiple Primary Malignant Neoplasms
Archives of Surgery, 1969Almost a century ago Billroth1described two patients in both of whom developed more than one primary malignant neoplasm. Although not published until 1869, one of these patients was reported in 1860 according to Warren and Gates2and Judge.3Since that time, there has been a permutation of the occurrence rate of this disease from that of a rare medical ...
L V, Campbell, A L, Watne
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Archives of Surgery, 1958
Primary multiple cancers are spoken of as synchronous when two or more originate simultaneously (or at an interval of about six months), and as metachronous when there is a long interval (more than six months) between appearances. The distinction can be made with some degree of accuracy on surface, or accessible, cancers but hardly ever on deep-seated,
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Primary multiple cancers are spoken of as synchronous when two or more originate simultaneously (or at an interval of about six months), and as metachronous when there is a long interval (more than six months) between appearances. The distinction can be made with some degree of accuracy on surface, or accessible, cancers but hardly ever on deep-seated,
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Primary Multiple Colonic Carcinoma
Oncology, 1986Polypoid lesions of the colon are commonly accepted risk factors for the development of carcinomas of the colon. Fifty-two of 266 patients with one or more polypoid lesions of the colon showed a carcinoma in one of the polyps, 6 patients had a second carcinoma.
M, Frass +6 more
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The Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon, 1994
Between 1970 and 1990, of 1287 patients undergoing resection for primary lung cancer, we considered 55 (4.3%) to have a second primary lung cancer, being synchronous in 15 cases (1.2%) and metachronous in 40 (3.1%). Two patients had a third primary lung cancer.
A F, Verhagen +4 more
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Between 1970 and 1990, of 1287 patients undergoing resection for primary lung cancer, we considered 55 (4.3%) to have a second primary lung cancer, being synchronous in 15 cases (1.2%) and metachronous in 40 (3.1%). Two patients had a third primary lung cancer.
A F, Verhagen +4 more
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