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1  colonic diverticular disease (also known as diverticular disease).
2 f fiber in the pathogenesis and treatment of diverticular disease.
3 d with a greater and not lower prevalence of diverticular disease.
4 nary evidence that it might be effective for diverticular disease.
5 ctors appear to contribute to development of diverticular disease.
6 known about the role of heritable factors in diverticular disease.
7 matory bowel disease, pouchitis, and colonic diverticular disease.
8 comitant rise in the number of patients with diverticular disease.
9  potentially lethal complication of duodenal diverticular disease.
10 harmacological abnormalities associated with diverticular disease.
11 be the main drivers of colonic resection for diverticular disease.
12 wel disease 34%, cancer 18%, polyps 17%, and diverticular disease 13%.
13 S) of 15,220 Icelanders for association with diverticular disease (5,426 cases) and its more severe f
14 ion of M3 receptors in diverticular disease (diverticular disease 7.8% [1.9-20.4], controls 1.7% [0.8
15 p symptomatic diverticulosis, termed colonic diverticular disease (also known as diverticular disease
16 e area was 13.2% (6.0-23.3) in patients with diverticular disease and 2.5% (1.6-3.7) in controls (p<0
17 was 17.5% (range 10.0-37.0) in patients with diverticular disease and 47.0% (29.0-54.0) in controls (
18  rs7609897-T: P=1.5 x 10(-10), OR=0.87) with diverticular disease and in FAM155A (family with sequenc
19  cohort study using patients with perforated diverticular disease and population controls identified
20 ons of sigmoid colons from ten patients with diverticular disease and ten controls, after resections
21 ad surgery for colorectal cancer, 14,019 for diverticular disease, and 7222 for inflammatory bowel di
22 th or without epidural analgesia for cancer, diverticular disease, and benign polyps.
23                                Patients with diverticular disease are frequently advised to avoid eat
24 nts with primary diagnoses for colon cancer, diverticular disease, benign colonic neoplasm, and ulcer
25  represents the most serious complication of diverticular disease, but little is known regarding its
26 rcinoma is best differentiated from masslike diverticular disease by the absence of diverticula in th
27                                              Diverticular disease can range in severity from symptoma
28 nd pain in the left quadrant of the abdomen, diverticular disease causing mortality and morbidity doe
29 is of CD, UC, malignancy, or benign disease (diverticular disease, Clostridium difficile) undergoing
30  receptors were upregulated in patients with diverticular disease compared with controls: the median
31 s infectious events, and two (10%) developed diverticular disease complications, leading to trial wit
32  of laparoscopy in the elective treatment of diverticular disease decreases rates of complications co
33 ies, we identified 142,123 incident cases of diverticular disease diagnosed at a hospitalization (197
34 n of heritable factors to the development of diverticular disease diagnosed at a hospitalization or o
35 .0001), with upregulation of M3 receptors in diverticular disease (diverticular disease 7.8% [1.9-20.
36 atients who underwent elective surgeries for diverticular disease from 2005 to 2008.
37                  The incidence of perforated diverticular disease has doubled over the period of the
38        Much of our previous understanding of diverticular disease has recently been challenged.
39 emia (HR per 1 SD, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.84-0.98), diverticular disease (HR per 1 SD, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.90-0.
40                                              Diverticular disease imposes an impressive clinical burd
41 n's disease in 95, ulcerative colitis in 18, diverticular disease in 17, carcinoma in 25 (16 after ra
42 essionals (40-75 years old) who were free of diverticular disease in 1986 (baseline) was performed.
43 e are the first loci shown to associate with diverticular disease in a genome-wide study.
44                                    The RR of diverticular disease in one twin when the other had dive
45                                   The RR for diverticular disease in siblings of index cases was 2.92
46          The use of laparoscopy for treating diverticular disease, in the absence of absolute contrai
47                             Risk factors for diverticular disease include age older than 65 years, ge
48                               Treatments for diverticular disease include dietary fibre, pharmacologi
49                                              Diverticular disease is characterized by pouches (that i
50                                              Diverticular disease is commonly associated with the old
51 he use of laparoscopy in colon resection for diverticular disease is feasible and results in fewer co
52                          The pathogenesis of diverticular disease is likely multifactorial and comple
53                                              Diverticular disease is the most commonly reported findi
54 oline did not differ between the two groups (diverticular disease mean 5.6% [SD 0.3], controls 5.2% [
55 acetylcholine was increased in patients with diverticular disease (mean -log EC(50) 5.6 [SD 0.3]) com
56 nsferase activity was lower in patients with diverticular disease (median 19.5%, range 12.0-30.0) tha
57 lon at CT colonography, representing chronic diverticular disease (n = 97) or sigmoid carcinoma (n =
58 oing aneurysm repair (n=21) or colectomy for diverticular disease (n=13, control).
59 arge, prospective study of men without known diverticular disease, nut, corn, and popcorn consumption
60 gy, clinical presentation, and management of diverticular disease of the colon and its complications.
61                Men reporting newly diagnosed diverticular disease on biennial follow-up questionnaire
62 ned as surgical intervention at any time for diverticular disease or presence of computed tomography
63  colorectal resection for colorectal cancer, diverticular disease, or inflammatory bowel disease.
64 d/or rectal resection for colorectal cancer, diverticular disease, or inflammatory bowel disease.
65 gastritis, gastric cancer, diarrhea, colonic diverticular disease, polyps, cancer, liver disease incl
66                                 Diagnosis of diverticular disease relies on imaging approaches, such
67                                   Perforated diverticular disease represents the most serious complic
68 t 53% (95% CI, 45%-61%) of susceptibility to diverticular disease results from genetic factors.
69 y, 16 sequence variants are followed up in a diverticular disease sample from Denmark (5,970 cases, 3
70                  This SNP may be a marker of diverticular disease severity that might assist in surgi
71                    Symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD) is a recognized clinical con
72 e in severity from symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD) to symptomatic disease with
73 de inflammation in symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD), and the role of anti-inflam
74 laboratory investigations into the causes of diverticular disease suggests that disturbances in choli
75 acetyltransferase was lower in patients with diverticular disease than in controls: median percentage
76 cular disease in one twin when the other had diverticular disease was 14.5 (95% CI, 8.9-23) for monoz
77                                Patients with diverticular disease were identified by International Cl
78 of the pathophysiology of diverticulosis and diverticular disease, which encompasses genetic alterati