Results 201 to 210 of about 29,255 (243)
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Extrarenal Wilms' Tumor

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1979
Extrarenal Wilms' tumor is a rare entity usually seen as a mass in the retroperitoneal area. It may surround and distort otherwise normal kidneys and ureters. Like many other abdominal masses, its true nature remains uncertain until microscopic examination has been performed after surgery.
R G, McCauley   +3 more
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Wilms tumor genes

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Cancer, 1993
Multiple 'WT' genes exist. The WT1 gene at chromosomal band 11p13 has been cloned and is known to be important in the etiology of at least some tumors by virtue of the identification of both germline and somatic mutations in WT patients. Genes at 11p15 and 16q are also involved, either as initiating or tumor progression events.
V, Huff, G F, Saunders
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Adult Wilms' Tumor

Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1988
AbstractTwo well‐documented cases of Wilms' tumor in adult patients are reported. Surgery remains the treatment of choice in stage I cases with favorable cell differentiation. Adjuvant therapy with chemotherapy or radiation may be necessary in patients beyond stage I or when the cell differentiation is more anaplastic.
S Y, Chang, C P, Ma, W H, Lee
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Jessop and the Wilms’ tumor

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 2003
The earliest specialists in the field of pediatric surgical oncology were the surgeons of 19th century Europe, particularly Billroth, Kocher, and Wilms. However, the first successful nephrectomy for a Wilms' tumor in a child was performed by a less famous name, Thomas Richard Jessop (1837-1903) at the Leeds General Infirmary on June 7, 1877.
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Genetics of Wilms' tumor

Human Genetics, 1981
The analyses of published data for Wilms' tumor show the following results: 1) The mode of inheritance of familial cases, which constitute less than 1% of all Wilms' tumors, is autosomal dominant with variable penetrance and expressivity. The familial pattern reveals no evidence that this tumor is associated with a vertically transmitting tumor ...
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Ultrasound of Wilms' tumor

Pediatric Radiology, 1986
The grey scale ultrasound features of 30 cases of Wilms' tumour examined using a water delay scanner are presented. Eighty-seven percent of masses were of uniform texture, with echogenicity equal to or slightly greater than that of liver with small hypo-echoic areas. There were no totally cystic tumours in the series.
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Wilms' tumor

Urology, 1974
V C, Canale, E C, Muecke
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Wilms Tumor

Journal of Urology, 1979
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Wilms' Tumor

Postgraduate Medicine, 1970
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