Cancer Review, Volume 2

Front Cover
Francis Cavers
J. Wright & Sons Limited, 1927 - Cancer
 

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Page 398 - The knee joint, formed between the articular surfaces of the lower end of the femur and the upper end of the tibia, is largely a hinge joint.
Page 249 - RIVERS (2, 3, 5), who reported that the first change noted in the epidermal cells is an increase in size. Then small, pink, granular areas appear in the cytoplasm: these areas rapidly increase in size and frequently involve most of the cytoplasm. In the centre of the acidophilic masses blue round or rod-shaped bodies are often seen, probably extruded nucleolar material.
Page 399 - Special Report of the Departments of Public Health and Public Welfare, Relative to the Prevalence of the Disease of Cancer Throughout the Commonwealth, and Particularly of the Disease in Its Inoperable Stage or Form— House Document No.
Page 124 - The significance of uterine mucosa in the fallopian tube, with a discussion of the origin of aberrant endometrium, Am.
Page 487 - A Clinical Study of the Effect of Radiation on Blood Cholesterol in Malignant Disease (a preliminary report), by Walter L.
Page 123 - Endometriosis of the sac of a right inguinal hernia; associated with a pelvic peritoneal endometriosis and an endometrial cyst of the ovary.
Page 340 - Among recent migrants 69 per cent of the males and 67 per cent of the females were between the ages of 15 and 29.
Page 293 - The overall rate of respiration due to all biological activity in the soil — that is, the amount of oxygen consumed and the amount of carbon dioxide produced by the entire profile — determines the aeration requirement of the soil.
Page 257 - ... and then introduce the air-dried soil, in small lumps ranging from the size of a pea to that of a walnut, but not pulverized or even crushed ; fill the funnels with the soil to the extent of about two-third*.
Page 249 - In the center of the acidophilic masses, blue, round or rodshaped bodies are often seen. The cytoplasmic bodies in many respects resemble the Bollinger bodies found in cells affected by the virus of contagious epithelioma of fowls. The disease process in the epidermal cells progresses until there is a complete dissolution of the cells. At this time distinct vesicles appear in the epidermis, which are not unlike the ones encountered in virus diseases that usually attack the skin, eg, herpes simplex.

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