Results 221 to 230 of about 20,124 (268)
A Case Report of Metastatic Gastric Cancer with Pyloric Stenosis from Breast Cancer.
Takashi Emoto +5 more
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Inflammatory status predicts prognosis in patients with gastric cancer with early pyloric stenosis who underwent radical resection: A propensity score‑matching analysis. [PDF]
He L, Li J, Li X, Wang X, Yan Q.
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Case Report: Gas in the esophagus, stomach wall and portal vein with congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. [PDF]
Yao N, Zhang W, Gao Q, Lu C, Wang Q.
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Pediatrics International, 2016
AbstractInfantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis is the most commonly encountered surgical disease among pediatric patients. Incomplete pyloromyotomy is not uncommon complication of pyloromyotomy. However, recurrent pyloric stenosis is extremely rare. Up until now, there are only five cases reported in the English literature.
Amani, Al-Ansari, Tariq I, Altokhais
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AbstractInfantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis is the most commonly encountered surgical disease among pediatric patients. Incomplete pyloromyotomy is not uncommon complication of pyloromyotomy. However, recurrent pyloric stenosis is extremely rare. Up until now, there are only five cases reported in the English literature.
Amani, Al-Ansari, Tariq I, Altokhais
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Congenital Hypertrophic Pyloric Stenosis
The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, 1927Congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis has been written about frequently and its treatment has become moderately well standardized; nevertheless, in the series of over a thousand cases that have occurred in the Children's Hospital, situations have arisen which either are not emphasized in the literature or are in need of clarification.
W E, LADD, P F, WARE, L K, PICKETT
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The American Journal of Digestive Diseases, 1967
An unusual case of adult pyloric stenosis with recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding has been presented together with a review of prior observation on the diagnosis and differential features of this rarely encountered entity. The many diverse causes of secondary pyloric stenosis have been reviewed in the differential diagnosis of pyloric canal narrowing.
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An unusual case of adult pyloric stenosis with recurrent gastrointestinal bleeding has been presented together with a review of prior observation on the diagnosis and differential features of this rarely encountered entity. The many diverse causes of secondary pyloric stenosis have been reviewed in the differential diagnosis of pyloric canal narrowing.
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AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1933
BABY ROBERT, age eight weeks, was admitted to the hospital at 10:50 A.M., October 26, 1932, with a diagnosis of pyloric stenosis. He was a full-term baby, delivered normally, weighing 734 pounds at birth. He is the youngest of three "babies,' so to speak, the oldest being two and a half years old and the second, fourteen months.
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BABY ROBERT, age eight weeks, was admitted to the hospital at 10:50 A.M., October 26, 1932, with a diagnosis of pyloric stenosis. He was a full-term baby, delivered normally, weighing 734 pounds at birth. He is the youngest of three "babies,' so to speak, the oldest being two and a half years old and the second, fourteen months.
openaire +2 more sources

