Results 301 to 310 of about 251,185 (338)
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Clinical Pediatrics, 1962
1. An infant with phenylketonuria who has never had a positive urine FeCl3 test is reported. 2. Some of the problems concerning the diagnosis of phenylketonuria are discussed.
C C, MABRY, T L, NELSON, F A, HORNER
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1. An infant with phenylketonuria who has never had a positive urine FeCl3 test is reported. 2. Some of the problems concerning the diagnosis of phenylketonuria are discussed.
C C, MABRY, T L, NELSON, F A, HORNER
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The Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1988
Spontaneous rupture of the esophagus (Boerhaave's syndrome) usually presents in a dramatic fashion. Classically, following repeated episodes of vomiting, patients present with chest pain, dyspnea, cyanosis, shock, and cardiovascular collapse. We present a case of occult Boerhaave's syndrome diagnosed by an upper gastrointestinal series in a 33-year-old
G S, Singh, C M, Slovis
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Spontaneous rupture of the esophagus (Boerhaave's syndrome) usually presents in a dramatic fashion. Classically, following repeated episodes of vomiting, patients present with chest pain, dyspnea, cyanosis, shock, and cardiovascular collapse. We present a case of occult Boerhaave's syndrome diagnosed by an upper gastrointestinal series in a 33-year-old
G S, Singh, C M, Slovis
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Epilepsia, 1988
Summary: Forty‐one infants with neonatal seizures frequent enough to be captured by randomly recorded routine EEG examinations were studied to determine how often their electrographic seizures were occult (subclinical) and to examine the effects of seizure duration and mental status on their clinical visibility.
R R, Clancy, A, Legido, D, Lewis
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Summary: Forty‐one infants with neonatal seizures frequent enough to be captured by randomly recorded routine EEG examinations were studied to determine how often their electrographic seizures were occult (subclinical) and to examine the effects of seizure duration and mental status on their clinical visibility.
R R, Clancy, A, Legido, D, Lewis
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1962
The classic syndrome of temporal arteritis has been the subject of much attention in general medical and ophthalmic literature, and its features are familiar to most ophthalmologists. However, little emphasis has been given to the fact that temporal arteritis may be a distinctly occult disease without sufficient symptoms and signs to alert the ...
R J, SIMMONS, D G, COGAN
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The classic syndrome of temporal arteritis has been the subject of much attention in general medical and ophthalmic literature, and its features are familiar to most ophthalmologists. However, little emphasis has been given to the fact that temporal arteritis may be a distinctly occult disease without sufficient symptoms and signs to alert the ...
R J, SIMMONS, D G, COGAN
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Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1986
Of 14 patients with navicular tuberosity avulsion, seven had damage to the anterior process of the calcaneum at the calcaneocuboid joint--possibly the result of an occult subluxation of the midtarsal joint. These patients were all middle-aged women who had slipped or fallen a short distance.
C R, Howie, G, Hooper, S P, Hughes
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Of 14 patients with navicular tuberosity avulsion, seven had damage to the anterior process of the calcaneum at the calcaneocuboid joint--possibly the result of an occult subluxation of the midtarsal joint. These patients were all middle-aged women who had slipped or fallen a short distance.
C R, Howie, G, Hooper, S P, Hughes
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2015
The term “occultism” was first used in the first half of the nineteenth century, but has its roots in a much older history. The adjective occultus (Lat., “hidden”), from which it derived, was used to indicate beliefs, ideas, and practices related to forces or properties of nature that were considered to be impenetrable to the normal human senses, but ...
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The term “occultism” was first used in the first half of the nineteenth century, but has its roots in a much older history. The adjective occultus (Lat., “hidden”), from which it derived, was used to indicate beliefs, ideas, and practices related to forces or properties of nature that were considered to be impenetrable to the normal human senses, but ...
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The American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1983
Pediatric occult bacteremia is a newly-recognized clinical condition. Less than two decades ago, bacteremia was considered insignificant unless it was associated with systemic symptoms. ’ Currently, occult bacteremia is a familiar clinical disease with potential complications, broadly defined as the presence of pathogenic bacteria in the blood of a ...
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Pediatric occult bacteremia is a newly-recognized clinical condition. Less than two decades ago, bacteremia was considered insignificant unless it was associated with systemic symptoms. ’ Currently, occult bacteremia is a familiar clinical disease with potential complications, broadly defined as the presence of pathogenic bacteria in the blood of a ...
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The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1977
The medical records of 50 patients with a diagnosis of presenile dementia supported by radiological evidence of cerebral atrophy were examined for antecedent manifestations of depressive illness. Symptoms consistent with major affective disorder were present in one half and depressive spectrum diagnoses were made in one fourth of the cases prior to ...
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The medical records of 50 patients with a diagnosis of presenile dementia supported by radiological evidence of cerebral atrophy were examined for antecedent manifestations of depressive illness. Symptoms consistent with major affective disorder were present in one half and depressive spectrum diagnoses were made in one fourth of the cases prior to ...
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Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1982
R, Breuer, W, Baigelman, R D, Pugatch
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R, Breuer, W, Baigelman, R D, Pugatch
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