Advanced search×

Diagnosing oral lesions in older adults--a systematic approach.

Tex Dent J 126(7):589 (2009) PMID 19753813

Version: za2963e q8zaa q8zb4 q8zce q8zd8 q8zee q8zf7 q8zgb

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. An evaluation of [F-18]-fluorodeoxy- D -glucose positron emission tomography, bone sc...

    Pediatr Blood Cancer 60(7):1113-1117 (2013) PMID 23192939

    Our study indicates FDG-PET may be sufficient for initial screening for osseous metastases and identified all patients who also have bone marrow metastases. If osseous metastases are detected, a bone scan can detect additional osseous lesions and BMBx may indicate prognostic bone marrow metastases....
  2. Children's Oncology Group's 2013 blueprint for research: acute lymphoblastic leukemia

    Pediatr Blood Cancer 60(6):957-963 (2013) PMID 23255467

    Approximately 90% of the 2,000 children, adolescents, and young adults enrolled each year in Children's Oncology Group acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) trials will be cured. However, high-risk subsets with significantly inferior survival remain, including infants, newly diagnosed p...
  3. An Analysis of the Epidemiological and Etiological Factors of Oral Tumors of Young Adults in a Central-Eastern European Population.

    Pathol Oncol Res (2013) PMID 23645516

    The etiology of tumors in young age is not precisely known yet, but studies on the topic generally agree that in this group of patients the traditionally known behavioural risk factors (tobacco and alcohol abuse) play no or a significantly less important role. Oral squamous cell carc...