PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «ENCHONDROMATOUS»
enchondromatous
enchondromatous
define
growth
cartilage
within
shaft
substance
bone
origin
latin
greek
chóndr
ōma
related
forms
defined
enchondroma
modern
from
classical
chondros
chondro
adjective
medical
chon
drom
tous
drō
tŭs
relating
having
elements
chinese
many
other
translations
reverso
meaning
also
echinodermatous
enchorial
encroachment
type
term
pronunciation
en′kon
drō′mă
definitions
collins
always
noun
plural
mata
pathology
benign
cartilaginous
tumour
most
commonly
bones
hands
feet
derived
ˌenchonˈdromatous
word
mandarin
what
drugs
provided
stedman
includes
terms
onelook
search
found
dictionaries
that
10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «ENCHONDROMATOUS»
Descubre el uso de
enchondromatous en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
enchondromatous y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
British Medical Journal: BMJ
Now, an enchondromatous tumour may have these characters.
Enchondromatous tumours spring from bone, from cartilage, from fibrous tissue.
These are precisely the parts with which the tumour appeared to be connected.
The lumbar ...
2
Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
FIBRO-ENCHONDROMATOUS TUMOUR COMPLICATING PREGNANCY. SAFE
DELIVERY. WITH REMARKS. By ALFRED WILTSHIRE, M.D., M.B.C.P. Lond.,
JUNIOR PHYSICIAN TO THE WEST LONDON HOSPITAL; PHYSICIAN TO THE ...
Obstetrical Society of London, 1871
3
A Descriptive catalogue of the Warren Anatomical Museum
An enchondromatous tumor, connected with the first phalanx of the index finger,
and about If in. in diameter. From a girl, set. fifteen years, who first noticed the
growth eight years before, as a small, hard tumor, not adherent to the integument
...
Harvard University. Warren Anatomical Museum, 1870
4
Descriptive Catalogue of the Pathological Specimens ...
Violent inflammation succeeded. After eleven months suffering, the foot was
amputated. Presented by Sir Stephen L. Hammich. The bones of a great toe, from
the under surface of which a nodulated, spheroidal, enchondromatous tumour
has ...
Hunterian Museum, London, Royal College of Surgeons of England. Museum, Edward Stanley, 1863
5
obsterical transactions
lecture published in the ' British Medical Journal ' of January 1st, 1870. A widow,
aet. 36, who had borne seven children, had a very large enchondromatous
tumour springing from the region of the right sacro-iliac synchondrosis. A portion
of ...
We are much inclined to believe that an early extirpation would have saved life
and limb, because the growth belongs to that kind of enchondromatous tumours
which are funned on the surface of the bone, and covered by periosteum, without
...
7
The London Lancet: A Journal of British and Foreign ...
Mr. Laurence, who is known as the author of a prize essay on the Diagnosis of
Surgical Cancer, has done good service in collating apposite cases referring to
the rarer kinds of cancer, as the nrn- void, villous, osteoid, enchondromatous, ...
8
The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
... there existed an irregular cavity that would have held two or three ounces; it
contained a brownish synovial-like fluid, and the defined parietes were formed by
the enchondromatous structure itself. A smaller and similar cavity existed near
the ...
9
Diagnostic Imaging of Musculoskeletal Diseases: A Systematic ...
... bone-within-the-bone appearance. Calcified infarctions are non-continuous
and give the impression of rotten pipes, but enchondromatous calcifications have
a spotty or popcorn appearance and sometimes the calcifications can be counted
.
Akbar Bonakdarpour, William R. Reinus, Jasvir S. Khurana, 2010
10
McGlamry's Comprehensive Textbook of Foot and Ankle Surgery
Mirra et al (243) proposed tissue patterns as a reliable means of identification of
chondromas. The enchondromatous pattern aids in the diagnosis of
enchondromatous tissue and establishes the condition as benign. The definitive
sign that the ...
The Podiatry Institute, Joe T. Southerland, Jeffrey S. Boberg, 2012