Results 301 to 310 of about 235,297 (357)
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Obstructive salivary gland disease

Primary Dental Journal, 2022
This paper provides an overview of the most common cause of salivary gland complaints presenting to the general dental practitioner, obstructive salivary gland disease (OSGD). It is important to be aware of the characteristic signs and symptoms to allow for appropriate management and onward referral.
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Salivary Gland Disease

2010
Salivary gland disease covers a wide range of pathological entities, including salivary gland-specific disease, as well as manifestations of systemic diseases. This chapter discusses the recent advances in managing obstructive salivary gland disease, the move from gland excision to gland preservation, the dilemmas in diagnosing and managing tumours of ...
Bethan L, Thomas   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Polycystic disease of salivary glands

The Journal of Laryngology & Otology, 1995
AbstractPolycustic disease of salivary glands is a rare condition which hitherto has been reported only glands. We report a case in which and accessory salivary gland had evidence of plycystic disease.
D J, McFerran   +3 more
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Ultrasound in Salivary Gland Disease

ORL, 1993
This text reviews the normal ultrasound (US) anatomy of the salivary glands along with tumoral, lithiasic, and inflammatory pathologies. For salivary gland tumors, US does have limitations (failure to visualize the entire parotid gland, relations with the nerve plexus, in-depth spread of large tumors, false-negative errors of malignancy for small ...
J N, Bruneton, M Y, Mourou
openaire   +2 more sources

SALIVARY GLAND DISEASES

, 2001
N. Roland, R. D. Mcrae, A. Mccombe
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Non-neoplastic salivary gland diseases.

Minerva Stomatologica, 2006
A wide range of non neoplastic disorders can affect the salivary glands, although the more common are: mumps, acute suppurative sialadenitis, Sjögren's syndrome and drug-induced xerostomia. Salivary dysfunction is not a normal consequence of old age, and
P. Arduino   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

DISEASES OF THE SALIVARY GLANDS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1948
The secretions of the buccal cavity are derived from a number of secretory glands, the parotid, submaxillary and sublingual glands; the glands of Blandin and Nuhn, the palatal glands, Moore glands and a number of small mucus-secreting units situated in the floor of the mouth and the buccal surfaces of the cheeks.
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Salivary Gland Changes in Disease

Journal of Dental Research, 1987
Ultrastructural alterations occurring in human salivary glands as a result of a variety of diseases are described. Major changes in these organs in cases of cystic fibrosis are probably the result of duct blockage, as indicated by study of chronically inflamed salivary glands.
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Video clip assessment of a salivary gland ultrasound scoring system in Sjögren’s syndrome using consensual definitions: an OMERACT ultrasound working group reliability exercise

Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 2019
Objective To develop ultrasound (US) definitions and a US novel scoring system for major salivary gland (SG) lesions in patients with primary Sjögren’s syndrome (pSS) and to test their intrareader and inter-reader reliability using US video clips ...
S. Jousse-Joulin   +31 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Benign salivary gland disease

Hospital Medicine, 2001
The majority of benign clinical problems that present affect the major salivary glands — parotid and submandibular. However, there are numerous minor salivary glands located in the mucosa of the head and neck which have the same predilection to the same diseases that affect the major glands but to a lesser frequency.
openaire   +2 more sources

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