戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 rst year of infection prevented death due to gastric outlet obstruction.
2 resented regularly with common bile duct and gastric outlet obstruction.
3 ignificantly decreases the incidence of late gastric outlet obstruction.
4 ed or developed gastrointestinal bleeding or gastric outlet obstruction.
5 in terms of broadening our differentials for gastric outlet obstruction.
6  the pyloric sphincter muscle layer leads to gastric outlet obstruction.
7               The lesion is characterized by gastric outlet obstruction and multiple anatomic abnorma
8 ignancy frequently presents with biliary and gastric outlet obstruction and palliative open intervent
9 tetrad of pancreatitis, biliary obstruction, gastric outlet obstruction and rapid decline of hemoglob
10 ave acute pancreatitis, biliary obstruction, gastric outlet obstruction and rapid decline of hemoglob
11 rointestinal tract bleeding, gastric cancer, gastric outlet obstruction, and benign disease.In the ar
12  treatment of biliary obstruction, malignant gastric outlet obstruction, and intractable abdominal pa
13                   When patients present with gastric outlet obstruction, both non-malignant and malig
14 ted mice developed antral adenocarcinoma and gastric outlet obstruction by 24 months.
15         Infants present with vomiting due to gastric-outlet obstruction caused by hypertrophy of the
16 omy was 8.3 months, and during that interval gastric outlet obstruction developed in none of the 44 p
17        In 8 of those 43 patients (19%), late gastric outlet obstruction developed, requiring therapeu
18                 For endoscopic palliation of gastric outlet obstruction, enteral self-expanding metal
19 re performed in 28 patients with symptoms of gastric outlet obstruction following gastric restrictive
20 inoma has been determined to be the cause of gastric outlet obstruction, further immunohistochemistry
21                Esophageal stricture (ES) and gastric outlet obstruction (GOO) can occurred in patient
22 specially for select patients with malignant gastric outlet obstruction (GOO) with acceptable surviva
23  distend (up to 2-4 L of food) and malignant gastric outlet obstruction is often undetected clinicall
24          The most common malignancy to cause gastric outlet obstruction is primary gastric adenocarci
25 nectomy (n = 1), acute pancreatitis (n = 2), gastric outlet obstruction (n = 1), acute renal failure
26 ge (n = 2), delayed splenic rupture (n = 1), gastric outlet obstruction (n = 1), and late partial sma
27         However, other complications include gastric outlet obstruction, nausea, vomiting, weight los
28 diagnosis of unexplained duodenal stricture, gastric outlet obstruction or gastrointestinal ulceratio
29 astrointestinal (GI) complications (colitis, gastric outlet obstruction, or perirectal abscess) and/o
30 tions include bypassing malignant and benign gastric outlet obstruction, providing access to the panc
31 , and outcome of this technique are reviewed.Gastric outlet obstruction remains a difficult problem t
32 copic palliation have demonstrated that late gastric outlet obstruction, requiring a gastrojejunostom
33           A 55-year-old Hispanic female with gastric outlet obstruction secondary to a newly diagnose
34      Our case is the only reported case with gastric outlet obstruction secondary to gastroduodenal I
35                  Herein, we report a case of gastric outlet obstruction secondary to metastatic lobul
36 , both non-malignant and malignant causes of gastric outlet obstruction should be considered.
37 asms, and endoscopic palliation of malignant gastric outlet obstruction via stenting.
38 rgical findings, the surgeon determined that gastric outlet obstruction was a significant risk in 107
39 ointestinal bleeding, perforation, or benign gastric outlet obstruction were recruited from 28 hospit