Results 261 to 270 of about 448,309 (307)
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Cancer of the Stomach

Archives of Surgery, 1958
It is obvious in a critical comparative survey of the literature on gastric carcinoma that there is a wide variation in the published five-year survival rates. Thus, the reported rates expressed in terms of five-year survivors range from a low of 0.7% to a high of 35%.
R N, LEHMANN   +4 more
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Cancer of the stomach

The American Journal of Surgery, 1981
Carcinoma of the stomach, although its incidence is decreasing in the United States, is still a fatal disease. The results today are actually no better than they were 30 years ago because we are still making late diagnoses. In order to improve our results in the treatment of cancer of the stomach, we must perform fiberoptic gastroscopy in individuals ...
A, Ochsner, T E, Weed, W R, Nuessle
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Pharmacogenomics and stomach cancer

Pharmacogenomics, 2004
In subgroups of gastric cancer patients, chemotherapy treatments carry a high risk of toxicity without any clear evidence of antitumor activity. Individualization of therapy is required to treat each patient with the optimal drug and dose. Genetic polymorphisms are the hereditary determinants for interindividual variations of drug effect and the ...
Giuseppe, Toffoli, Erika, Cecchin
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Nutrition and stomach cancer

Cancer Causes and Control, 1996
Epidemiologic evidence on the relation between nutrition and stomach cancer is reviewed. Stomach cancer shows a distinct international variation and dramatic worldwide decline. These descriptive features suggest that dietary factors are important in determining the risk of stomach cancer.
S, Kono, T, Hirohata
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Epidemiology of Stomach Cancer

2009
Despite a major decline in incidence and mortality over several decades, stomach cancer is still the fourth most common cancer and the second most common cause of cancer death in the world. There is a 10-fold variation in incidence between populations at the highest and lowest risk.
Hermann, Brenner   +2 more
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Cancer of the Stomach

Postgraduate Medicine, 1954
Attention is called to the important differences between malignant gastric ulcer and the proliferative tumor. Likewise the great difficulty in differentiation between malignant and benign ulcer is emphasized. The operability rate in carcinoma of the stomach still remains only 50 per cent or less.
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Epidemiology of cancer of the stomach

World Journal of Surgery, 1979
AbstractThe epidemiologic study of cancer is based primarily on mortality, morbidity, clinical, and autopsy statistics. The analysis of the results of a mass survey examination of the stomach has contributed considerably to the epidemiologic study of gastric cancer.
S, Yamagata, S, Hisamichi
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EPISODIC STOMACH CANCER

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1955
Excerpt In this era of poor prognosis for stomach cancer we felt it would be encouraging to report the history of a patient who survived three separate stomach resections, each for carcinoma of the...
I L, STOLOFF, T J, LATTIMORE
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Of nerves and stomach cancer

Science Signaling, 2017
Blocking a feed-forward cholinergic loop between gastric neurons and the mucosal epithelium may inhibit proliferation in tumor-associated stem cells.
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Oncogenes of Stomach Cancers

1990
Although stomach cancer is a common malignant disease in Japan as well as elsewhere in the world, little is known about the genetic changes that may be associated with the development of tumors. Therefore, we examined the transforming activities of 58 samples of DNA from stomach cancers and noncancerous portions of stomach mucosa.
M, Terada   +7 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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