Results 291 to 300 of about 367,624 (344)
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Phantom gallbladders

Medical Journal of Australia, 2000
The sensitivity of ultrasonography for detecting gallstones is high, but mishaps can occur. The three false positive cases we describe here illustrate problems which may be encountered in interpreting ultrasound images and in communication between the clinician, patient and ultrasonographer.
M L, Giles, J J, Gome, H, Ross
openaire   +2 more sources

Phantom Orchalgia

Journal of Urology, 1994
Chronic scrotal pain is most commonly explained by the radiculitis that is caused by low back strain. The diagnosis is made chiefly by taking a careful history and by excluding other causes. Treatment directed to relieve sensory nerve root irritation at the T10 to L1 levels is often successful.
J M, Holland, J L, Feldman, H C, Gilbert
openaire   +2 more sources

Phantom Angina

Chest, 1994
A 49-year-old man with a history of traumatic left above-elbow amputation was hospitalized for surgical management of a phantom pain syndrome. Evaluation revealed a history of exertional chest pain radiating into the phantom limb. Exercise testing reproduced the pain symptoms and demonstrated electrocardiographic ischemic S-T segment depression ...
W R, Martin, A, Margherita, E, Amsterdam
openaire   +2 more sources

Phantom Sweating

Angiology, 1977
Phantom sweating is a sensation in which the patient feels that sweat is about to burst out of skin pores, but in which sweating never actually occurs. In a series of 100 patients undergoing bilateral upper dorsal sympathectomy for palmar hyperihidrosis, 82 patients were specifically questioned and 48 (59%) reported phantom sweating.
A, Kurchin, M, Mozes, R, Walden, R, Adar
openaire   +2 more sources

Phantom Limbs

Regional Anesthesia: The Journal of Neural Blockade in Obstetrics, Surgery, & Pain Control, 1989
A phantom limb is universally experienced after a limb has been amputated or its sensory roots have been destroyed. A complete break of the spinal cord also often leads to a phantom body below the level of the break. Furthermore, phantom breasts, genitals and other body areas occur in a substantial number of people after surgical removal or denervation
openaire   +2 more sources

PHANTOM

ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 2010
For designers of large-scale parallel computers, it is greatly desired that performance of parallel applications can be predicted at the design phase. However, this is difficult because the execution time of parallel applications is determined by several factors, including sequential computation time in each process, communication time and their ...
Jidong Zhai, Wenguang Chen, Weimin Zheng
openaire   +1 more source

PHANTOM

Proceedings of the 2013 ACM SIGSAC conference on Computer & communications security - CCS '13, 2013
We introduce PHANTOM [1] a new secure processor that obfuscates its memory access trace. To an adversary who can observe the processor's output pins, all memory access traces are computationally indistinguishable (a property known as obliviousness). We achieve obliviousness through a cryptographic construct known as Oblivious RAM or ORAM.
Martin Maas   +7 more
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Higher phantom and Ext-phantom morphisms

Journal of Algebra and Its Applications, 2018
A morphism [Formula: see text] of left [Formula: see text]-modules is called an [Formula: see text]-phantom morphism if the induced morphism [Formula: see text] for every (finitely presented) right [Formula: see text]-module [Formula: see text]. Analogously, a morphism [Formula: see text] of left [Formula: see text]-modules is said to be an [Formula ...
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Phantom-limb pain

The Lancet, 1997
Preparation of this chapter was supported by a Medical Research Council of Canada (MRC) Scholar Award and MRC Grant #MT-12052.
openaire   +2 more sources

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