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Neck Dissection in the New Era
Journal of the American College of Surgeons, 2007l l w t f o lective and therapeutic management of cervical lymph ode metastasis in patients with squamous cell carcioma of the head and neck remains a subject of much ebate. With the exception of distant metastases, the resence of cervical lymph node metastases is the single ost adverse independent prognostic factor in patients ith head and neck ...
FERLITO, Alfio, SILVER CE, RINALDO A.
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1996
Neck dissections for the en bloc removal of cervical lymph nodes come in a variety of shapes and sizes. The radical neck dissection is the standard procedure to which all other neck dissections are compared. It includes resection of the sternocleidomastoid muscle, the internal jugular vein, the spinal accessory nerve, and the lymph nodes from levels I ...
Christina Isacson+3 more
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Neck dissections for the en bloc removal of cervical lymph nodes come in a variety of shapes and sizes. The radical neck dissection is the standard procedure to which all other neck dissections are compared. It includes resection of the sternocleidomastoid muscle, the internal jugular vein, the spinal accessory nerve, and the lymph nodes from levels I ...
Christina Isacson+3 more
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Neck dissection: present and future?
European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 2008A number of issues are at the forefront of current considerations in surgical treatment of the neck in head and neck cancer. These include proposed new definitions of lymph node levels that will lend themselves to clinical and radiographic examination, the possibility of employing molecular studies to supply information on the metastatic potential of ...
FERLITO, Alfio, SILVER CE, RINALDO A.
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Neck dissection in the nineteenth century
European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 2007The nineteenth century brought great progress in several Welds of surgery and medicine. In addition to the fact that insights, which were gained in the laboratory or during anatomic dissection studies, were, for the Wrst time, correlated to bedside Wndings and could then be used to improve the treatment of patients, the medical world struggled to ...
FOLZ BJ+8 more
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2009
The central compartment of the neck, also known as level VI, is bounded by the carotid arteries laterally, the hyoid bone superiorly, and the suprasternal notch or innominate artery inferiorly. Papillary thyroid cancer, derived from follicular cells, and medullary thyroid cancer, derived from parafollicular cells, commonly metastasize to the cervical ...
Cord Sturgeon, Dina M. Elaraj
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The central compartment of the neck, also known as level VI, is bounded by the carotid arteries laterally, the hyoid bone superiorly, and the suprasternal notch or innominate artery inferiorly. Papillary thyroid cancer, derived from follicular cells, and medullary thyroid cancer, derived from parafollicular cells, commonly metastasize to the cervical ...
Cord Sturgeon, Dina M. Elaraj
openaire +2 more sources