Results 141 to 150 of about 18,934 (200)

Disseminated Kaposi Sarcoma With Gastrointestinal Involvement and Primary Effusion Lymphoma in an Untreated HIV Patient: A Case Report. [PDF]

open access: yesCureus
Al Radaideh A   +10 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Tocilizumab as stabilizing frontline treatment in suspected KSHV inflammatory cytokine syndrome. [PDF]

open access: yesBlood Adv
Host KM   +6 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Kaposi's Sarcoma

New England Journal of Medicine, 2000
In 1872, Moritz Kaposi, a Hungarian dermatologist, described five men with aggressive “idiopathic multiple pigmented sarcomas of the skin.”1 One patient died of gastrointestinal bleeding 15 months after the initial appearance of the skin lesions, and an autopsy showed visceral lesions in the lungs and the gastrointestinal tract.
K, Antman, Y, Chang
openaire   +2 more sources

Kaposi's Sarcoma

Clinics in Chest Medicine, 1988
Pulmonary KS may occur in up to 20 to 25 per cent of patients with cutaneous KS. The presenting symptoms of pulmonary KS are indistinguishable from those of opportunistic pathogens that cause pneumonia. It most frequently presents with the symptoms of cough or dyspnea; however, fever, hemoptysis, and stridor have been reported to occur secondary to ...
F P, Ognibene, J H, Shelhamer
openaire   +2 more sources

KAPOSI'S SARCOMA

International Journal of Dermatology, 1994
Revue generale: l'experience Africaine, l'association a des etats d'immunodeficits, le SIDA histologie et histogenese, virologie ...
T H, Finesmith, J P, Shrum
openaire   +2 more sources

Kaposi's sarcoma

Cancer, 1966
Sixty three patients with Kaposi's sarcoma (1935–1963) have been reviewed. Of this group 18 patients died of a secondary primary. The second primaries included 5 cases of Hodgkin's disease, 3 of lymphosarcoma, 3 of carcinoma of the colon and one each of multiple myeloma, malignant melanoma, carcinoma of the prostate, carcinoma of the tongue, carcinoma ...
P H, O'Brien, R D, Brasfield
openaire   +2 more sources

Kaposi's Sarcoma

New England Journal of Medicine, 1962
IN 1872 Kaposi1 described a peculiar pigmented multiple sarcoma of the skin that still defies clinicians and pathologists. Almost 800 cases have been reported in the literature, and many of these have been studied intensively by all methods now available: bacteriologic tests; tissue tests; transplantation; attempted induction by carcinogens ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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