Results 301 to 310 of about 716,122 (354)
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Benign neoplasms of the stomach
The American Journal of Surgery, 1960Abstract A study of the experience with 104 benign gastric neoplasms has been presented. Adenomas were found most frequently and were present in fifty patients. Leiomyomas, which numbered forty-four, represented the next largest group. Adenomas and leiomyomas accounted for 90.3 per cent of the benign neoplasms of the stomach.
William Grafe +3 more
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The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1967
This monograph deals with all phases of gastric neoplasia, but the authors emphasize recent advances in diagnostic and therapeutic methods. They have drawn from their combined surgical experiences with over 1,700 cases of gastric tumors seen at the Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Diseases in New York over the past quarter century.
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This monograph deals with all phases of gastric neoplasia, but the authors emphasize recent advances in diagnostic and therapeutic methods. They have drawn from their combined surgical experiences with over 1,700 cases of gastric tumors seen at the Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Diseases in New York over the past quarter century.
+6 more sources
Smooth Muscle Neoplasms of the Stomach
Southern Medical Journal, 1983We reviewed the records of 31 patients with smooth muscle tumors of the stomach seen at the First Surgical Department, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece, between the years 1961 and 1981 with special emphasis on the clinical data, diagnosis, and pathology.
DELIKARIS, P +5 more
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Associated of rs895819 with risk of stomach neoplasms
Gene, 2020A recent study published in GENE performed a meta-analysis on the relationship between genetic variant rs895819 in microRNA-27a and risk of stomach neoplasms, and the results indicated an association of rs895819 with increased risk of stomach neoplasms in heterogenous model among Chinese. However, the meta-analysis did not include one large sample size
Da Wang, Yu Weng, Rongpan Bai
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Nonepithelial neoplasms of the stomach
Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, 1984Routine endoscopic mucosal biopsy yields a specimen of 2 to 3 mm in size. The diagnostic accuracy is thought to be related to the number of specimens obtained. Mucosal lesions of the stomach which are inflammatory, hamartomatous, adenomatous, or malignant can be differentiated.
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Lymphangiectasis of Stomach Simulating Polypoid Neoplasm
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1964Benign vascular tumors of the stomach are rare, and of these lymphangioma is the rarest. Many benign tumors present as a radiological finding during a barium contrast examination of the gastrointestinal tract—the demonstration of a filling defect of the stomach—which directs attention to their presence.
Alfred L. Hurwitz, Paul Chodack
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Neuroendocrine Neoplasms of the Stomach
2016Based on rising incidence in recent decades, gastric neuroendocrine tumors (G-NETs) or gastric carcinoids (GCs) are being increasingly identified at endoscopy, both as polypoid and nonpolypoid gastric lesions. There are four types of G-NETs with important epidemiological, pathophysiological, histopathologic, and endoscopic differences that affect their
Aejaz Nasir +4 more
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FOREIGN BODY IN THE STOMACH WALL SIMULATING A NEOPLASM
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1953When a patient has vague gastrointestinal symptoms that persist unchanged, the surgeon should consider the possibility that the patient has ingested a foreign body, perhaps without knowing it. The literature on the subject reveals many interesting case reports but a high percentage of error in diagnosis.
James A. Rooney, Arkell M. Vaughn
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Benign neoplasms of the stomach
The American Journal of Surgery, 1932B ENIGN tumors of the stomach are of unusuaI interest to the surgeon because of their rarity and the serious complications which they may produce as we11 as the possibihty of overIooking them in the course of a routine examination and because they can be deaIt with onIy by surgica1 means. The symptoms suggested by such tumors are obscure chronic anemia,
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