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Case Report
- A Case of Desmoplastic Infantile Ganglioglioma.
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Kwang Chul Song, Seong Ho Kim, Jang Ho Bae, Oh Ryong Kim, Byung Yon Choi, Soo Ho Cho, Dong Seok Kim
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Yeungnam Univ J Med. 1997;14(2):451-458. Published online December 31, 1997
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.12701/yujm.1997.14.2.451
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Abstract
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- The desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma is very rare cerebral tumor. It has been known to be characterized by its voluminious size, intense desmoplasia and the frequent presence of astrocytic and ganglioglionic differentiation. Also, It is usually presented in infantile period and predilected in the frontal and parietal lobes. We treated a huge desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma(8?7?6cm) on the right frontotemporo-parietal area with only gross total resection. It includes solid mass & several cysts and shows the areas of the proliferation of spindle cells exhibiting storiform pattern in dense desmoplastic stroma and the areas composed of spindle shaped glial component.
Original Article
- Infantile Hypertrophic Pyloric Stenosis.
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Young Soo Huh, Gyu Rag Kim, Son Moon Shin
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Yeungnam Univ J Med. 1996;13(2):199-210. Published online December 31, 1996
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.12701/yujm.1996.13.2.199
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Abstract
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- Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis(IHPS), which occurs three of 1,000 live births, is a major cause of 1 nonbilious vomiting of early infancy but its etiology and pathogenesis are still obscure. The operation of pyloromyotomy as described by Ramstedt in 1912 remains the standard of care for the treatment of IHPS. From January 1993 to October 1996, 35 infants with IHPS were surgically treated and the following results were obtained. 1. Thirty-five patients comprised 32 males and 3 females, and the ratio of male to female was 10.7:1. 2. The most prevalent age group was between 2 weeks and 8 weeks. 3. Of 35 infants, first born babies were 23 cases(65.7%). 4. Breast feeding was in 23 cases(65.7%). 5. The body weight percentile at admission was lower than 50 percentile in all 35 cases. 11. A total of seven associated anomalies were noted in six patients. 12. All 35 cases were treated with Fredet-Ramstedt pyloromyotomy. 13. There were postoperative complications of wound infection in 2 cases. Intermittent nonprojectile vomiting was presented in 8 cases(22.9%) after operation, but one of them was relieved in 13 days and the rest were relieved within one week by adjustment of oral intake.
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