Results 151 to 160 of about 3,815 (191)
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Spinal anaesthesia and spina‐bifida occulta

Anaesthesia, 1996
Summary We describe a patient with unexpected spina bifida who underwent spinal anaesthesia for trans‐urethral resection of prostate and developed serious neurological signs. An unexpected spinal tumour was removed two weeks later. This report demonstrates that not all neurological problems associated with spinal anaesthesia should be
P R, Davies, A B, Loach
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Spina bifida occulta: Lesion or anomaly?

Clinical Radiology, 1985
Failure of fusion of the posterior arches of the lumbosacral spine above S3 was sought on frontal radiographs of 653 patients attending an accident and emergency (A & E) department. The patients were aged from 2 months to 98 years and represent all those with relevant information discharged as A & E outpatients over a 2-year period.
D, Boone   +3 more
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Spina bifida occulta in functional enuresis

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 2005
To study incidence of spina bifida occulta in nocturnal enuresis cases and to compare outcome of enuresis with spina bifida occulta and enuresis without spina bifida occulta.Patients with enuresis divided into two groups based on X-ray lumbosacral spine.
Praveen, Kumar   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Tuberous Sclerosis and Spina Bifida Occulta

The Journal of Dermatology, 1992
AbstractAn interesting occurrence of tuberous sclerosis and spina bifida occulta is described, highlighting their unique and previously undescribed association in a 5‐year‐old boy.
V N, Sehgal, D M, Thappa, S, Jain
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Prehistoric Spina Bifida Occulta

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1978
To the Editor.— The recent letter by Guidotti (240:348, 1978) implies that a 90% incidence of spina bifida occulta in ten adult skeletons from a protohistoric American Indian burial site is a medical mystery and an unprecedented archaeological finding.
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SPINA BIFIDA OCCULTA CERVICALIS

Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1925
Hypertrichosis over a dimpled area in any region of the vertebral column is suggestive of spina bifida occulta. It is considered almost pathognomonic for those types of spina bifida in which a protruding cystic tumor is absent. The hairy area usually covers a defect in the vertebra in the form of an absent or split spinous process, a cleft in the arch ...
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