- ... x34 Anorexia nervosa 1 0 1 670-887y Anus, adenocarcinoma, suspect 0 1 1 670-400.1 Anus,fissure of 1 1 2 661-1x0 App ...
- ... or the linings of the throat, esophagus, lungs, anus, cervix, vagina, etc.; adenocarcinomas are cancers that develop from gland cells. Most ...
- NLM Digital Collections - Diseases of the rectum, anus, and colon: including the ileocolic angle, appendix, colon, ...Publication: Philadelphia ; London : W. B. Saunders Company, [1923]... in the small intestine. 334 Diseases of the Anus, Rectum, and Colon Adenocarcinomas of the large intestine are clinically classed as ...
- ... but behaves similarly and is treated the same. Adenocarcinoma. This type of ... cancers form outside the anus in the perianal area. This area is mainly ...
- ... cancers. These are typically treated the same as anal canal cancers, although local therapy alone can be considered for discrete skin lesions with significant separation from the anal verge. Adenocarcinomas starting in anal glands or fistulae formation are ...
- NLM Digital Collections - Radiology in World War IIPublication: Washington, D.C. : Office of the Surgeon General, Dept. of the Army : For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. G.P.O., 1966... 057 Cervix 14 Miscellaneous conditions: Colon, rectum, and anus Arthritides Boeck’s sarcoid 40 Kidney (adenocarcinoma) 3 3 Larvnx 24 Bursitis 38 Lung 18 ...
- ... tiab]) AND (cancer*[tiab] OR carcinoma*[tiab] OR adenocarcinoma*[tiab] OR malignan*[tiab] OR ... OR “Anus Neoplasms”[Mesh:noexp] OR “Anal Gland Neoplasms”[Mesh] ...
- NLM Digital Collections - Diseases of the rectum, anus, and colon: including the ileocolic angle, appendix, colon, ...Publication: Philadelphia ; London : W. B. Saunders Company, [1923]... pavement-celled or anal—skin—and carcinoma or adenocarcinoma to cylindric-celled or rectal cancer. In 300 of the author’s consecutive anorectal cancer patients tumors were encountered in the rectum and sigmoid flexure in 95, and at the anus in 5 per cent, of the cases (Fig. ...
- ... SNs most often involved the colon (39%), rectum/anus (16%), liver (18%), and stomach (13%). The SIR for colorectal cancer was 4.2 (CI, 2.8–6.3). The most prevalent GI SN histology was adenocarcinoma (56%). The highest risk of GI SNs was ...
- NLM Digital Collections - Genetic aspects of gastrointestinal cancerPublication: Washington : WRAMC-TV, [1977]... melanocytes of the face, oral cavity digits, digits, anus and vagina polyps of the elementary tract malignancy rare including particularly colonic adenocarcinoma, ovarian tumors have been reported in conjunction with ...
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