Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Evgeniya Sokolovskaya"'
Publikováno v:
F1000Research, Vol 3 (2014)
With less than 40 cases reported, primary leiomyosarcoma is an extremely rare form of breast cancer (less than 0.0006% of cases) with unpredictable biological behavior that usually presents as a slow growing, mobile mass in middle age women. Most cas
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/781e9585691e4bc887666fbea7307183
Autor:
Ryma Benayed, Miglena K. Komforti, Evgeniya Sokolovskaya, Rebecca M. Thomas, Catherine A. D’Agostino
Publikováno v:
Virchows Archiv. 473:361-369
In 2002, due to extensive histomorphologic, immunohistochemical, and cytogenetic similarities, the World Health Organization unified undifferentiated small round blue cell neoplasms of soft tissue and bone (previously segregated as Ewing sarcoma or P
Autor:
T. Shinde, Evgeniya Sokolovskaya
Publikováno v:
Radiography. 22:21-24
Purpose The purpose of this study was to determine if patients with elevated BMI were more likely to get Abdominopelvic CT imaging compared to patients with normal BMI presenting with similar Gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms to the Emergency Room (ER).
Autor:
Stanley Lu, Leizle E. Talangbayan, Ernest F. Wiggins, Tejas Shinde, Yasmeen Shariff, Andrew J. Kwak, Richard B. Ruchman, Evgeniya Sokolovskaya
Publikováno v:
Journal of the American College of Radiology. 12:683-688
Purpose The purpose of the study was to determine if increasing radiologist reading speed results in more misses and interpretation errors. Methods We selected a sample set of 53 abdomen-pelvis CT scans of variable complexity performed at a teaching
Autor:
Evgeniya Sokolovskaya, Yasmeen Shariff
Publikováno v:
The Breast Journal. 21:678-679
Autor:
Evgeniya, Sokolovskaya, Tejas, Shinde, Richard B, Ruchman, Andrew J, Kwak, Stanley, Lu, Yasmeen K, Shariff, Ernest F, Wiggins, Leizle, Talangbayan
Publikováno v:
Journal of the American College of Radiology. 12:896-897
Publikováno v:
F1000Research
With less than 40 cases reported, primary leiomyosarcoma is an extremely rare form of breast cancer (less than 0.0006% of cases) with unpredictable biological behavior that usually presents as a slow growing, mobile mass in middle age women. Most cas