Results 271 to 280 of about 41,783 (315)
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Pulmonary sequestration

Paediatric Respiratory Reviews, 2004
Pulmonary sequestration refers to the situation whereby a portion of lung tissue receives its blood supply from an anomalous systemic artery. Three main variants exist: intralobar, extralobar and communicating bronchopulmonary foregut malformations. Venous drainage is typically via a systemic vein, although drainage into the pulmonary veins is well ...
Harriet J, Corbett   +1 more
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Pulmonary sequestration

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1987
A review of 41 patients over a 15-year period with a diagnosis of pulmonary sequestration was undertaken. The most common presenting complaint was repeated infections of the sequestrated segment. Two of our patients were symptomatic since the neonatal period. On an average, each patient was admitted three times to the hospital before undergoing surgery.
P P, Collin, J G, Desjardins, A H, Khan
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Lobar Pulmonary Sequestration

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 1970
Four cases of lobar sequestration are described, which have been managed in this hospital during the period from February, 1962 to April, 1969. All of them occurred among the local Malaysian population. Only one of these four showed anatomical features that were consistent with descriptions of this condition in the available literature. The other three
M, Krishnan, M R, Snelling
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Intralobar Pulmonary Sequestration

Cirugía Española (English Edition), 2015
A 28-year-old patient was diagnosed by CT scan with intralobar pulmonary sequestration in the left lower lobe associated with cystic images, one of which was probably infected (Fig. 1). Lung auscultation was normal; no lymphadenopathies were palpated. Respiratory function tests showed: FVC 5.28 L (97%), FEV1 4.14 L (95%), and IT 98%. Surgical resection
Francisco B, Lacy   +3 more
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Intraabdominal Pulmonary Sequestration

Current Surgery, 2006
Bronchopulmonary sequestration is an uncommon developmental abnormality that frequently presents as an incidental mass. Differential diagnosis includes malignancy. Reports of extralobar abdominal pulmonary sequestration in adults are sparse. Only 2.5% of all pulmonary sequestrations are detected below the diaphragm.
Jan, Franko   +2 more
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Intraabdominal pulmonary sequestration

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1991
A left upper quadrant fetal abdominal mass was detected at 24 weeks gestation. The mass was again confirmed in a postnatal ultrasound. Pathological analysis of the excised mass demonstrated an intraabdominal lung sequestration with Stocker type II congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation (CCAM).
M D, Black   +3 more
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Extralobar pulmonary sequestration

Surgery, 2008
During prenatal ultrasound screening of a male fetus, a mass lesion within the left lung was detected. This was initially thought to be a congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation (CCAM). Following normal delivery at term gestation, the patient remained asymptomatic and was discharged in good condition after 48 hours of close observation in the ...
Janice A, Taylor   +2 more
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Pulmonary sequestration

Medicina Clínica (English Edition), 2022
Elisa, Martínez-Besteiro   +3 more
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Intralobar Pulmonary Sequestration

1991
Intralobar pulmonary sequestration is a rare congenital anomaly, comprising a mass of non-functioning lung tissue, without normal bronchial and vascular connections. The condition has two distinct clinical presentations: 1. In the 1st year of life, it may present as the site of a significant arterio-venous shunt, and then is usually associated with ...
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Intralobar Pulmonary Sequestration

Diseases of the Chest, 1953
Pulmonary displacement associated with an anomalous artery has been frequently described since the advent of much chest surgery. The earliest adequate report of such a case is generally attributed to Tissler in his D#{252}sseldorf thesis, unpublished but quoted by Muller.’ Earlier classical descriptions by Rektorzek2 (1861), and Humphrey3 (1884) and ...
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