Search results for "gnomon"

showing 10 items of 26 documents

Kümmell's Disease: Clarifying the Mechanisms and Patients' Inclusion Criteria.

2014

The three major causes of vertebral body collapse include infection, malignant neoplasia, and trauma and it may be difficult to distinguish between them, particularly in the presence of severe osteoporosis. In 1891, however, Dr Hermann Kümmell, further added another possibility of vertebral body crush; the delayed posttraumatic collapse. As originally described, this rare clinical entity includes patients, who after a trivial trauma and an asymptomatic clinical course they develop a progressive vertebral body collapse and a painful kyphosis. Although more than a century has passed from its initial description, only few cases have been reported in the literature, whereas the main pathologic …

medicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsbusiness.industryKyphosisTime lagvertebral body collapseDiseasemedicine.diseaseAsymptomaticArticleSurgeryIntravertebral vacuum cleftresearch reviewKummell's diseasePathognomonicmedicineKümmell’s diseaseSevere osteoporosismedicine.symptomvertebral osteonecrosis.businessCollapse (medical)The open orthopaedics journal
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Akute emphysematöse Cholezystitis als Ursache eines Pneumoperitoneums

2008

A 48-year-old man developed progressively more severe epigastric pain, pain on pressure in the right upper abdomen and fever up to 38.6 degrees C so that acute cholecystitis was suspected. Ultrasound did not demonstrate a gall-bladder but a sickle shaped, dense echo with a distal adjoining echo-free zone. Computed tomography revealed air in the gall-bladder lumen as well as intramural and pericholecystic air pockets, findings pathognomonic for emphysematous cholecystitis. In addition pneumoperitoneum was diagnosed. Subsequent cholecystectomy intraoperatively revealed a gangrenous, nonperforating gall-bladder in which E. coli was demonstrated. During the first postoperative week, there were …

medicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentLumen (anatomy)General Medicinemedicine.diseaseEpigastric painSurgeryPneumoperitoneumPathognomonicTicarcillinTobramycinMedicineCholecystectomybusinessAbscessmedicine.drugDMW - Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift
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Drugs and Toxins Effects on the Liver

2011

Drug induced hepatotoxicity can be defined as a liver injury caused by drug or herbal medicines leading to liver test abnormalities or to a liver dysfunction with a reasonable exclusion of the other competing aetiologies. The liver has a central function in the metabolism of the xenobiotics, and as a result it may be susceptible to its toxic or idiosyncratic effects. While the overall incidence of drug induced liver injury (DILI) is infrequent (1 in 10.000 to 100.000 persons exposed), the impact is significant in the general population, with broad implications for patients, physicians, pharmaceutical industries and governmental regulatory agencies. DILI is the principle reason for the termi…

DrugLiver injurymedicine.medical_specialtyeducation.field_of_studyPrescription drugbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationmedicine.diseaseClinical trialFulminant hepatic failurePathognomonicmedicineIntensive care medicineeducationAdverse effectbusinessmedia_common
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Review: Neuroradiological aspects of infantile spasms

1987

With the modern noninvasive brain imaging methods, cerebral lesions of different types and degrees can frequently be determined in infants with West syndrome. In CT examinations preceding the spasms and the ACTH therapy, "idiopathic" forms of infantile spasms were rare. The CT findings consistent with perinatal or postnatal encephalopathy were more frequent than those found with embryonic or fetal lesions alone. The fact that pathognomonic changes cannot be determined, may reflect the low specificity of CT diagnosis in infants with chronic CNS diseases. A slight and mostly transient enlargement of CSF spaces during ACTH therapy is a probable side-effect of the medication. In infants with pe…

Pediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyFetusPathologybusiness.industryEncephalopathyWest SyndromeGeneral MedicineBrain damagemedicine.diseaseDevelopmental NeuroscienceNeuroimagingPathognomonicPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthmedicineCt diagnosisNeurology (clinical)Ct findingsmedicine.symptombusinessBrain and Development
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Infantile spasms—A multidisciplinary challenge

1987

Is it not surpnsmg that we are unaware of an earlier description of infantile spasms (IS) than that of Dr West from 1841 [1] , though this is hardly a new disease? May be, it needed an experienced observer to delineate these paroxysmal behavioral patterns against the background of abnormal psychomotor development. Up to now , we are by no means less puzzled by this manifestation of seizures than our professional forefather. It was only recently that we realized that the West syndrome consists not only of more or less typical serial seizures, usually a pathognomonic EEG pattern, and developmental arrest [2] , but has to be regarded as an encephalopathy [3-5] interfering with virtually all hi…

Psychomotor learningPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryEncephalopathyInfantWest SyndromeGeneral MedicineDiseasemedicine.diseaseDevelopmental NeuroscienceNeuroimagingPathognomonicPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthEtiologyHumansMedicineNeurology (clinical)businessSpasms InfantileSubclinical infectionBrain and Development
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Klinische Aspekte der "argyrophilic grain disease"

2000

Argyrophilic grain disease (AGD) is a frequently occurring degenerative illness of the aging human brain. It is accompanied by progressive pathological alterations of the cytsokeleton which are traceable to an abnormal phosphorylation of the microtubule associated tau protein. Histologically, it is possible with the help of suitable staining techniques to identify pathognomonic spindle-shaped cellular inclusions (argyrophilic grains). These cellular inclusions display a typical cortical as well as subcortical distribution pattern. The goal of the present study is the retrospective evaluation of the clinical findings from 53 individuals with neuropathologically demonstrable AGD-related chang…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyNeurologybiologybusiness.industryTau proteinNeurodegenerationGeneral MedicineDiseaseHuman brainmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyPathognomonicbiology.proteinMedicineDementiaNeurology (clinical)businessPathologicalDer Nervenarzt
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Acanthocytes in urinary sediment--a pathognomonic marker?

1998

TransplantationPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyRenal glomerulusbusiness.industryKidney GlomerulusEchinocyteNephrologyUrinary sedimentPathognomonicErythrocyte DeformabilitymedicineHumansbusinessAcanthocyteHematuriaNephrology Dialysis Transplantation
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A case of lipogranulomatosis Farber: some clinical and ultrastructural aspects

1985

A 20-month-old girl showed typical clinical signs of Farber disease: hoarseness since birth, and periarticular subcutaneous painful nodules. Complete deficiency of acid ceramidase activity was found in cultured skin fibroblasts. An electron microscopic examination of a dermal nodule disclosed pathognomonic tubular inclusions in histiocytes. In epidermal cells zebra-body-like and needle-like lysosomal inclusions were found. Their ultrastructure is different from that of the intrahistiocytic lysosomal inclusions. Probably three clinical types of Farber disease may be distinguished according to the symptomatology and the course of the disease: a severe type, an intermediate type and a relative…

AdultPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAcid CeramidaseAmidohydrolasesPathognomonicArthropathyCeramidasesmedicineHumansLipomatosisLymphocytesHistiocyteSkinFarber diseaseGranulomaHoarsenessbusiness.industryClinical coursemedicine.diseaseIntermediate typeAcid CeramidasePediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthUltrastructureFemaleJoint DiseasesbusinessEuropean Journal of Pediatrics
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Validity of the Colposcopic Criteria Inner Border Sign, Ridge Sign, and Rag Sign for Detection of High-Grade Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia

2013

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the association of three patho-gnomonic criteria, inner border, ridge sign, and rag sign with high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) using video exoscopy. METHODS: Retrospective evaluation of video recordings of 335 patients, referred for diagnostic colposcopy, who underwent cervical biopsies, and, if indicated loop excisions, was performed. The most severe histologic diagnosis was recorded. Sensitivity, specificity, positive, negative predictive value, and likelihood ratios for highgrade CIN were calculated. RESULTS: In 285 patients (85%), a single colposcopy directed biopsy was taken; 50 patients (15%) underwent two biopsies. One hundred sixty-two patie…

AdultUterine Cervical Neoplasmmedicine.medical_specialtyUterine Cervical NeoplasmsPredictive Value of TestCervical intraepithelial neoplasiaYoung AdultPredictive Value of TestsRetrospective StudiePathognomonicGermanyUterine Cervical DysplasiamedicineHumansAge FactorCervical Intraepithelial NeoplasiaRetrospective StudiesGynecologyColposcopymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryAge FactorsObstetrics and GynecologyMiddle AgedUterine Cervical DysplasiaRidge (differential geometry)medicine.diseaseColposcopyHigh Grade Cervical Intraepithelial NeoplasiaFemaleRadiologybusinessHumanSign (mathematics)Obstetrics & Gynecology
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Oral verruciform xanthoma : report of 13 new cases and review of the literature

2018

Background Oral verruciform xanthoma (OVX) is a rare lesion. The purpose of the present study is to describe the clinical features of 13 OVXs and review all cases reported in the English literature. Material and Methods Thirteen cases of OVX diagnosed during a 47-year period were retrospectively collected. The patients’ gender and age, as well as the main clinical features of the lesions were retrieved from the biopsy request forms. Pubmed®, Scopus® and Google ScholarTM electronic databases were searched with the key word “verruciform xanthoma”. Only cases of histologically confirmed OVX were included in the study. Results The 13 OVXs represented approximately 0.04% of 35,617 biopsies acces…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyReviewAsymptomatic030207 dermatology & venereal diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePathognomonicTongueBiopsyXanthomatosisHumansMedicineGeneral DentistryAgedRetrospective StudiesVerruciform xanthomaOral Medicine and Pathologymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryNodule (medicine)030206 dentistryMiddle Agedmedicine.disease:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Dermatology3. Good healthmedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologyUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASFemaleSurgeryHard palatemedicine.symptomDifferential diagnosisMouth Diseasesbusiness
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