HEPATIC NEOPLASMS
Hepatic neoplasms can be divided into three groups (1) benign neoplasms, (2) primary malignant neoplasms, and (3) metastatic malignant neoplasms. The latter category, that of metastatic tumors, constitutes the bulk of hepatic neoplasms in this country. This chapter will briefly review all three categories of hepatic neoplasms and will conclude with a brief discussion of the diagnostic approach to these lesions.
- RISK FACTORS
- Pathology
- Screening and Prevention
- Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD)
- Determination of Kidney Anatomy and Renal Blood Flow
- Lower GI Bleeding
- DIAGNOSIS AND EVALUATION
- PLEURAL DISEASE
- Treatment and Prognosis
- Verapamil
- ATRIAL RHYTHM DISTURBANCES
- ADAPTATION TO NEPHRON LOSS
- Acid-Base Abnormalities
- Anatomical Imaging of the Urinary
- Diagnosis
- CLINICAL FEATURES OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- BENIGN NEOPLASMS
- Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
- Differential Diagnosis and Evaluation of the Patient
- Visualization of the Biliary Tree
- PERICARDIAL DISEASES - ACUTE PERICARDITIS
- LABORATORY TESTS IN LIVER DISEASE
- DEFINITION
- PERFUSION
- OXYGEN
- Laparoscopy
- PROSTHETIC VALVES
- NONPENETRATING TRAUMA
- ARTERJAL BLOOD GASES
- Comprehensive Health-care Program for Children in Foster Care
- NAUSEA AND VOMITING
- Urinary Tract Infection
- Gardner's Syndrome
- Ultrasound and Computed Tomography
- Lidocaine