Results 331 to 340 of about 4,784,926 (369)
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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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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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Cancer of the Esophagus and Stomach
Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2008Upper gastrointestinal tumors involving the esophagus and the stomach are a serious public health problem worldwide. The West has seen a dramatic increase in the incidence of gastroesophageal cancers in the past 2 decades. Although Barrett esophagus has been well characterized, the exact pathway to developing frank malignancy remains undefined. Current
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Clinical evidence, 2005
Stomach cancer is usually an adenocarcinoma arising in the stomach, and includes tumours arising at or just below the gastro-oesophageal junction (type II and III junctional tumours). The annual incidence varies among countries and by sex, with about 80 cases a year per 100,000 in Japanese men, 30/100,000 in Japanese women, 18/100,000 in British men ...
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Stomach cancer is usually an adenocarcinoma arising in the stomach, and includes tumours arising at or just below the gastro-oesophageal junction (type II and III junctional tumours). The annual incidence varies among countries and by sex, with about 80 cases a year per 100,000 in Japanese men, 30/100,000 in Japanese women, 18/100,000 in British men ...
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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.
Suminori Kono, Tomio Hirohata
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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.
Suminori Kono, Tomio Hirohata
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Pharmacogenomics and stomach cancer
Pharmacogenomics, 2004In 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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Prognosis in cancer of the stomach
The American Journal of Digestive Diseases, 1962The records of 427 patients with gastric cancer have been reviewed and the various types of X-ray abnormalities produced by the tumor have been correlated with the clinical course following surgery. The 5-year survival rate for the entire series was 11 per cent.
Harold D. Harvey+2 more
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2018
Gastric cancer is considered one of the most frequent neoplasm of the old age with a peak in the seventh decade of life. Even if the overall incidence of gastric cancer has been reduced during the last decades, it is expected an increase number of new cases among old patients because of the elderly population is on rise.
Cristina Marmorale+2 more
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Gastric cancer is considered one of the most frequent neoplasm of the old age with a peak in the seventh decade of life. Even if the overall incidence of gastric cancer has been reduced during the last decades, it is expected an increase number of new cases among old patients because of the elderly population is on rise.
Cristina Marmorale+2 more
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Epidemiology of Stomach Cancer
2009Despite 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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