angiomatosis in Vietnamese

bệnh u mạch

Sentence patterns related to "angiomatosis"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "angiomatosis" from the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "angiomatosis", or refer to the context using the word "angiomatosis" in the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary.

1. Bartonella henselae/Bacillary angiomatosis

2. Bacillary angiomatosis: wrist mass

3. Bacillary angiomatosis: biopsy slide

4. Bacillary angiomatosis (caused by B

5. Bartonella henselae/Bacillary angiomatosis: cutaneous biopsy

6. Bacillary angiomatosis: an unusual-appearing plaque in cutaneous disease

7. Bacillary epithelioid angiomatosis occurring in an immunocompetent individual

8. A compensatory angiomatosis occurred equally in all number of cases.

9. The diffuse angiomatosis of the spleen is a rare splenic proliferation.

10. The patient has none of the cutaneous manifestations of encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis.

11. Bacillary angiomatosis is a vascular proliferative lesion caused by B

12. Bacillary angiomatosis is a bacterial disease which affects mainly immunosuppressed patients

13. The case presented here represents an unusual manifestation of neurocutaneous angiomatosis.

14. Bacillary angiomatosis: multiple subcutaneous nodules in a patient with Kaposi sarcoma

15. It is a sporadically occurring neurocutaneous syndrome affecting the intracerebral veins (venous angiomatosis).

16. Bacillary angiomatosis and Bacillary peliosis in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus

17. Bacillary angiomatosis (BA) is a rare infectious disease usually associated with HIV infection.

18. Bacillary angiomatosis is skin infection caused by the gram-negative bacteria Bartonella henselae or B

19. 54.5% of cases of disturbed placental maturation showed an angiomatosis as a sort of compensation.

20. Bacillary angiomatosis is a vascular, proliferative form of Bartonella infection that occurs primarily in immunocompromised persons

21. An angiomatosis—interpreted as a process of placental compensation—was diagnosed in severe and marked disturbed blood supply.

22. Therefore, Bacillary angiomatosis must be in the differential diagnosis regardless of the immune status of the patient

23. Bacillary angiomatosis may result in lesions in the skin, under the skin, in bone, or in other organs.

24. Bacillary angiomatosis is an infection of the skin and the subcutaneous tissue that also has a systemic involvement

25. hyponatremia (decreased natrium level in blood). Intercostal (between the ribs) and thoracal lymph angioma with generalised lymph angiomatosis.

26. Their origin from the angiomatosis is suggested by the sequence of the lesions and for topical and histogenetic reasons.

27. Relevant new bacterial pathogens are Bartonella henselae (cat scratch disease, bacillary angiomatosis), Tropheryma whippeli (Whipple's disease) and new Rickettsiae.

28. Bacillary angiomatosis in immunocompetent patients may occur at burn site, or site of cat scratch masquerading as a pyogenic granuloma

29. Emphasis is given to their progressive course in spite of decompressive laminectomy. (1 case): Telangectatic angiomatosis of the pons, medulla and cord.

30. These recurrences were thoroughly analysed with especial attention to the importance of heredity, pregnancies, retinal angiomatosis, cystic kidneys, polycythaemia, and so forth.

31. The main symptom is intracranial leptomeningeal angiomatosis which mostly affects the occipital and posterior parietal lobes and can occur unilaterally and also bilaterally.

32. We report on a 56-year-old woman with a spontaneous splenic rupture as the first symptom of diffuse angiomatosis of the spleen.

33. Bacillary angiomatosis (BA) is caused by infection with Bartonella henselae or Bartonella quintana, gram-negative rods that stimulate the proliferation and migration of endothelial cells

34. Bacillary angiomatosis is a systemic illness characterised by lesions similar to those of Kaposi sarcoma in the skin, mucosal surfaces, liver, spleen and other organs

35. Massive osteolysis Gorham-Stout is a rare, benign but locally aggressive angiomatosis which results in destruction and resorption of bone. The etiology and pathogenesis are undefined.

36. Among the symptoms these patients frequently developed were Bacillary angiomatosis, caused by Bartonella henselae or Bartonella quintana, and Bacillary peliosis, caused by Bartonella henselae

37. In agreement with other authors, avenous angiomatosis of the meningeal and spinal veins (angioma raoemosum venosum) is regarded as the primary cause of the disease.

38. A 38 year old woman showed first a lobular angiomatosis of the breast with regular neoplastic capillaries. After about one year multiple nodules of an angiosarcoma appeared.

39. The manifestations of Bacillary angiomatosis include diverse cutaneous lesions, visceral parenchymal Bacillary peliosis of the spleen and liver, and involvement of single or multiple organ systems

40. Significantly less often than expected from other data we found: signs of possible hereditary influence (0%), multiple tumor localization combined with angiomatosis retinae (0%), polyglobulia (10.8%).

41. In addition to the branchial cleft anomalies and lymph nodes discussed in part 1, paraganglioma, angiomatosis and neurogenic tumors are important differential diagnoses of solid lesions of the neck.

42. Autopsy revealed a poorly differentiated urothelial carcinoma of the right renal pelvis, with extensive carcinomatous angiomatosis and metastases to the left kidney, lungs, and regional and mediastinal lymph nodes.

43. Secondary syphilis and acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans regularly show a lichenoid infiltrate with interface dermatitis, whereas epidermal involvement is typically absent in erythema migrans, virus exanthema and bacillary angiomatosis.

44. The angiomatosis uteri shows a low scattering of nuclear DNA content; an euploid DNA stem line suggests a benign behavior in these tumors. This evidence is supported by clinical experiences.

45. Bacillary angiomatosis almost always occurs in immunocompromised people and is characterized by protuberant, reddish, berrylike lesions on the skin, often surrounded by a collar of scale. Lesions bleed profusely if traumatized

46. Reports on cutaneous Bacillary angiomatosis, which was present in two of these patients and which we believe is caused by the same agent that is responsible for Bacillary peliosis hepatis, suggest

47. (See also Overview of Bartonella Infections .) Bacillary angiomatosis almost always occurs in immunocompromised people and is characterized by protuberant, reddish, berrylike lesions on the skin, often surrounded by a collar of scale.

48. Diffuse dermal angiomatosis (DDA) is a benign, acquired vascular proliferation characterized by painful, poorly circumscribed, livid-erythematous plaques with frequent central ulceration. The clinical features are reminiscent of reactive angioendotheliomatosis or embolia cutis medicamentosa.

49. Bacillary angiomatosis (BA), a newly recognized disease characterized by cutaneous and subcutaneous vascular lesions containing Bacillary organisms visualized by Warthin-Starry silver staining, was described predominantly among HIV-infected patients; however, bacterial isolates were not made or identified (13–15).

50. Bacillary angiomatosis is a form of bacterial infection that can lead to the formation of skin lesions on your body. These lesions can form on the outer surface of your skin and can even grow on your internal organs such as your spleen, liver, and mucosal surfaces.