Results 181 to 190 of about 8,563 (214)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Radiology, 1953
Complete transposition of the viscera, or situs inversus totalis, in which the thoracic and abdominal viscera occupy a position the reverse of normal, occurs about once in 6,000 to 8,000 individuals. The common use of x-ray and physical examinations for the Army, schools, and industry have uncovered many cases and have established this incidence as ...
M A, ALMY, F H, VOLK, C M, GRANEY
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Complete transposition of the viscera, or situs inversus totalis, in which the thoracic and abdominal viscera occupy a position the reverse of normal, occurs about once in 6,000 to 8,000 individuals. The common use of x-ray and physical examinations for the Army, schools, and industry have uncovered many cases and have established this incidence as ...
M A, ALMY, F H, VOLK, C M, GRANEY
openaire +2 more sources
Situs inversus with levocardia
American Heart Journal, 1950Abstract 1. 1. A case of situs inversus with levocardia associated with duodenal atresia is presented. 2. 2. A review of the literature indicates that seventeen similar cases have been reported. 3. 3. All such cases have had bizarre anomalies of the heart and great vessels, usually either a transposition of the great vessels or a ...
S J, ROBINSON, J M, GARFINKLE
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Situs Inversus and Appendicitis
Southern Medical Journal, 1979Two cases of left lower quadrant appendicitis associated with situs inversus totalis are presented. Historic, genetic, and embryologic aspects of situs inversus, as well as recent theories regarding etiology are discussed. The clinical recognition of appendicitis in situs inversus is often difficult because of the unusual location of the appendix and ...
K A, Carmichael, W E, Gayle
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SITUS INVERSUS WITH LEVOCARDIA
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1951SITUS inversus of the abdominal viscera with the heart occupying its normal position seems to occur rather infrequently according to Taussig's book on congenital malformations of the heart.1Three cases are mentioned by Taussig, with a report of one autopsy.
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Neonatal Network, 2001
EXTERNALLY, THE HUMAN BODY appears symmetric; if a line is drawn down the middle of the body, each side appears identical. However, this is not true of the internal anatomy. For example, there is one heart, which lies in the left chest, one liver, in the right abdomen, and one stomach, in the left abdomen.
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EXTERNALLY, THE HUMAN BODY appears symmetric; if a line is drawn down the middle of the body, each side appears identical. However, this is not true of the internal anatomy. For example, there is one heart, which lies in the left chest, one liver, in the right abdomen, and one stomach, in the left abdomen.
openaire +2 more sources
Situs Inversus Totalis: A Clinical Review
International Journal of General Medicine, 2022Katalin Eitler +2 more
exaly
A Systematic Review of Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy in Situs Inversus
Journal of Investigative Surgery, 2021Mohamed Ali Chaouch +2 more
exaly

