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Results 1 - 10 of 11 for "brain+tumors"
  1. ... not developed any rhabdoid tumors. Familial posterior fossa brain tumor of infancy Familial posterior fossa brain tumor syndrome Familial rhabdoid tumor Hereditary SWI/SNF deficiency ...
  2. ... seen in people with Nijmegen breakage syndrome include brain tumors such as medulloblastoma and glioma, and a cancer ...
  3. ... an increased risk of some internal cancers, including brain tumors, thyroid cancer, and blood cancers. Additionally, affected individuals ...
  4. ... often appear in the bones, liver, lungs, or brain. Tumors that begin at one site and then spread ...
  5. ... or store ADH are damaged by head injuries, brain tumors, brain surgery, certain diseases and infections, or bleeding ...
  6. ... an enlarged head (macrocephaly) and a rare, noncancerous brain tumor called Lhermitte-Duclos disease. A small percentage of ...
  7. ... Other cancers commonly seen in this syndrome include brain tumors, cancers of blood-forming tissues (leukemias), and a ...
  8. ... A small proportion of affected individuals develop a brain tumor called medulloblastoma during childhood. A type of benign ...
  9. ... an increased risk of developing other cancers, including brain tumors and cancer of blood-forming tissue (leukemia).During ...
  10. ... than normal risk of developing certain types of brain tumors called neuroepithelial tumors. Schinzel-Giedion syndrome is very ...
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