Results 301 to 310 of about 639,736 (379)
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Journal of Surgical Oncology, 2001
AbstractThe pelvis of the infant and child has different anatomic relationships than the adolescent or adult pelvis, and the knowledge of congenital anomalies of the rectum and bladder can assist in treating the primary neoplasms of the pelvis. The most common neoplasms are rhabdomyosarcomas of the bladder, prostate, and vagina; sacrococcygeal teratoma;
D. Groff
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AbstractThe pelvis of the infant and child has different anatomic relationships than the adolescent or adult pelvis, and the knowledge of congenital anomalies of the rectum and bladder can assist in treating the primary neoplasms of the pelvis. The most common neoplasms are rhabdomyosarcomas of the bladder, prostate, and vagina; sacrococcygeal teratoma;
D. Groff
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Imaging of Pediatric Pelvic Neoplasms
Radiologic Clinics of North America, 2011Pediatric pelvic neoplasms, although relatively uncommon, are often difficult to evaluate and characterize with imaging, due to their overlapping appearances. This article discusses key clinical features and imaging findings that help limit the differential diagnosis of pediatric pelvic neoplasms.
Ricki U, Shah +4 more
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Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1975
AbstractThe following is a discussion of dyspareunia and its role as an aid to diagnosing pelvic neoplasms. The great majority of cases of dyspareunia are psychosomatic in origin, and in a large proportion of the remaining cases, painful coitus is an indicator of benign problems.
G W, Geelhoed, A S, Ketcham
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AbstractThe following is a discussion of dyspareunia and its role as an aid to diagnosing pelvic neoplasms. The great majority of cases of dyspareunia are psychosomatic in origin, and in a large proportion of the remaining cases, painful coitus is an indicator of benign problems.
G W, Geelhoed, A S, Ketcham
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Biological considerations with pelvic neoplasms
Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1999The strategy of therapy for any neoplasm is determined to a significant degree by the biological characteristics of the neoplasm. The ones benefited most by surgical ablation are the cancers that grow locally but never metastasize. The second group is composed of neoplasms with exceedingly slow growth rates permitting long periods of symptom-free ...
J S, Spratt, J S, Meyer
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Early Detection of Pelvic Neoplasms
Postgraduate Medicine, 1964The individual physician can salvage more cancer patients through early diagnosis than expert teams can salvage in large treatment centers.Examination of the female pelvis yields data more useful in early detection of cancer than does the clinical inspection of any other anatomic area.
A. Arneson
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Quality of life following pelvic exenteration in neoplasms
Journal of Surgical OncologyAbstractBackgroundPelvic exenteration (PE) is an extensive surgical treatment reserved for advanced or recurrent pelvic neoplasms, with potential impacts on patients' quality of life (QoL) poorly referenced in the literature.ObjectivesThis study aimed to evaluate QoL outcomes among three types of PE.MethodsA cross‐sectional study assessed 106 patients ...
Renato Morato Zanatto +9 more
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Multidiscipline Approach to Treatment of Recurrent Pelvic Neoplasms
Archives of Surgery, 1968THE RADICAL surgical treatment of recurrent carcinoma of the cervix was first proposed by Brunschwig in 1948. 1 With the accumulation of experience, operative morbidity and mortality has steadily decreased so that current rates are quite acceptable. 2-4 Sufficient time has elapsed so that definitive five-year survival statistics have been accumulated ...
S M, Lindenauer, G W, Morley, J C, Cerny
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Endoluminal Sonographic Evaluation of Ureteral and Renal Pelvic Neoplasms
The Journal of Urology, 1997The objective of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of endoluminal ultrasonography as an adjunct to endoscopy for the evaluation of urothelial neoplasms. An endoluminal ultrasound system using a 12.5 or 20 MHz transducer housed in a 6.2 French catheter was used intraureterally in 38 patients being evaluated endoscopically for suspected ...
J B, Liu +5 more
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Spinal—pelvic fixation in patients with lumbosacral neoplasms
Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine, 2000Object. Primary and metastatic neoplasms of the lumbosacral junction frequently pose a complex problem for the surgical management and stabilization of the spine because of the anatomical and biomechanical factors of this transition zone between spine and pelvis.
R J, Jackson, Z L, Gokaslan
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Pelvic relapses of uterine neoplasms: transvaginal sonographic and Doppler features
Gynecologic Oncology, 2004To describe the sonographic and power Doppler features of pelvic relapses in endometrial and cervical cancer.We retrospectively analyzed the preoperative transvaginal sonographic reports of 45 women with a histological diagnosis of pelvic relapse. The three diameters of the lesion were recorded; then the shape, margins, content (solid or cystic), and ...
Savelli, Luca +7 more
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