myositis in Vietnamese

Viêm cơ

Sentence patterns related to "myositis"

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

1. Myositis

2. Pyogenic myositis can be classified into either GAS necrotizing myositis, clostridial myonecrosis (gas gangrene), or nonclostridial (crepitant) myositis.

3. Rare: myositis, rhabdomyolysis

4. Bacterial causes are categorized by clinical presentation, anatomic location, and causative organisms into the categories of pyomyositis, psoas abscess, Staphylococcus aureus myositis, group A streptococcal necrotizing myositis, group B streptococcal myositis, clostridial gas gangrene, and nonclostridial myositis.

5. Necrotizing Fasciitis/Myositis ("flesh-eating disease")

6. Myositis, muscle weakness, muscle pain, arthralgia

7. Methods of treating sporadic inclusion body myositis

8. Other causes include over-exertion and non-traumatic causes such as acute rhabdomyolysis, drug-induced myositis and eosinophilic myositis.

9. Sensitive diagnostic assay for inclusion body myositis

10. pancreatitis, rectal haemorrhage renal failure, polyuria Myositis

11. Uncommon: rhabdomyolysis, myositis, back pain, muscle twitching, neck pain

12. Children are less likely to have myositis-specific Autoantibodies.

13. Blackleg (blackquarter, clostridial myositis) is an infectious disease of cattle and rarely of other ruminants, caused by Clostridium chauvoei and characterized mainly by necrotizing myositis

14. Persistent muscle weakness or muscle pain (myopathy/myositis), muscle cramp

15. Chronic or recurrent myositis may lead to orbital fibrosis or exophthalmos.

16. This review summarizes the microbiology, management, and prevention of myositis.

17. Three of 20 rats died with encephalitis, myositis, hepatitis, and pancreatitis.

18. For evaluation of myositis, CEUS is more efficient in the diagnostic work-up than routine b-mode ultrasound because CEUS can detect inflammation-induced muscular hyperperfusion in acute myositis.

19. Myositis proliferans is a rare and benign pseudosarcomatous tumour of soft tissue.

20. Apprehension about the risk of increasing the extent of myositis ossificans is unfounded.

21. In no case did myositis ossificans, muscle contracture, pseudarthrosis or cubitus varus occur.

22. • soft-tissue necrosis, including necrotizing fasciitis or myositis, or gangrene Differential Diagnosis

23. Clinically this myositis is frequently localized in the muscles of the eye.

24. A known etiologic factor such as syphilis, may produce both myositis and neuritis.

25. SST-ST: Soft tissue (necrotizing fascitis, infectious gangrene, necrotizing cellulitis, infectious myositis, lymphadenitis, or lymphangitis)

26. Even after partial resection of the tumor, the prognosis of focal myositis is excellent.

27. Report in two cases of unilateral papilloedema due to a orbitae myositis of unknown origin.

28. SST-ST: Soft tissue (necrotising fascitis, infectious gangrene, necrotising cellulitis, infectious myositis, lymphadenitis, or lymphangitis)

29. Other known pathogenetic mechanisms, e.g. an allergy, may cause myositis and neuritis to develop concurrently.

30. Deeper muscular tissue may be involved, with transitional forms or purely intramuscular changes, compatible with proliferative myositis.

31. Within 8 weeks she developed a serious sensorimotor mixed axonal and demyelinating neuropathy and a granulomatous myositis.

32. The authors report a study of myositis ossificans circumscripta in a 62 year old man.

33. Similar diagnostic specificity should apply to other local painful conditions, for example epicondylitis, cervical "myositis", etc.

34. This case report describes focal myositis, a rare inflammatory pseudotumorous disease previously not mentioned in the surgical literature.

35. In cases of symptomatic myasthenia and myositis the therapy should include as well corticosteroids as cholinesterase-inhibitors.

36. In a patient restricted in his motility because of myositis, a nerve lesion may arise from pressure paralysis.

37. Assay methods, kits and systems for an improved sensitive diagnosis of inclusion body myositis (IBM) are provided.

38. ‡ Myopathy may include muscle symptoms such as myositis, myalgia, muscle ache, muscle weakness, muscle cramp, muscle discomfort.

39. We observed 52 patients with myositis ossificans localisata partly of a traumatic, neurogenic or morbid (inflammable) origin.

40. In acute myositis there was only minimal variation of fibre size, heavy degeneration of fibres, and diffuse interstitial leucocytic infiltration.

41. The case of a 13-year-old girl with CVI is presented who required steroid treatment for myositis.

42. In acute anterior segment involvement angle closure glaucoma, keratitis with secondary uveitis, skleritis and myositis have to be considered.

43. INVESTIGATIONS: Echocardiography and electrocardiogram as well as lab tests were consistent with the diagnosis of fulminant myocarditis and acute myositis.

44. Enteritis, hepatitis, interstitial nephritis, and myositis, all of which began as acute reactions and developed into chronic lesions, were observed histologically.

45. Serious infections experienced by Enbrel-treated patients included cellulitis, gastroenteritis, pneumonia, cholecystitis, osteomyelitis, gastritis, appendicitis, Streptococcal fasciitis, myositis, septic shock, diverticulitis and abscess

46. We report on two patients who suffering from Crohn's disease developed an acute Guillain-Barré syndrom or a polyneuropathy associated with myositis.

47. The report is based on data that were obtained in studies on anaesthetised rats in which an acute or chronic myositis was induced experimentally.

48. There are several neurological complications such as meningitis, ventriculitis, encephalitis, myelitis, cerebral angiitis, myositis, paresis of motor nerves, acute polyneuritis, and most commonly post-zoster neuralgia.

49. Its steadily increasing clinical spectrum now includes erythema migrans, acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans, lymphadenosis beniga cutis, arthritis, myocarditis, progressive meningoencephalitis, myositis, and various ocular and skin disorders.

50. A certain woman who has blessed my life for decades has battled for the past 15 years the debilitating, difficult, and progressive disease called inclusion body myositis.