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Cancer: Gastric (Stomach) Cancer

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Total 26716 results found since Jan 2013.

JACS CME Featured Articles, Volume 220, January 2015
Use of endoscopic ultrasound in the preoperative staging of gastric cancer: a multi-institutional study of the US Gastric Cancer Collaborative
Source: Journal of the American College of Surgeons - December 14, 2014 Category: Surgery Tags: Continuing medical education program Source Type: research

Exam 1: Association Between Helicobacter pylori Eradication and Gastric Cancer Incidence: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Source: Gastroenterology - March 24, 2016 Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Continuing Medical Education (CME) Activities Source Type: research

Exam 1: Endoscopic Ultrasound Imaging Detection of Gastric Cancer in Familial Adenomatous Polyposis
Source: Gastroenterology - June 29, 2017 Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Continuing Medical Education (CME)/MOC Activities Source Type: research

Exam 2: Two Types of Gastric Cancer Caused by the Same Underlying Condition
Source: Gastroenterology - March 7, 2018 Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Continuing Medical Education (CME)/MOC Activities Source Type: research

CME Exam 2: Risk Factors and Incidence of Gastric Cancer After Detection of Helicobacter pylori Infection: A Large Cohort Study
Source: Gastroenterology - January 10, 2020 Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Continuing Medical Education (CME)/MOC Activity Source Type: research

Exam 2: Clinical Factors Associated With Gastric Cancer in Individuals With Lynch Syndrome
Source: Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology - January 31, 2020 Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Continuing Medical Education (CME) Activity Source Type: research

CME Exam 2: Population-based Analysis of Differences in Gastric Cancer Incidence Among Races and Ethnicities in Individuals Age 50 Years and Older
Source: Gastroenterology - November 1, 2020 Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Continuing Medical Education (CME)/MOC Activity Source Type: research

CME Exam 1: Effect of Helicobacter pylori Eradication Therapy on the Incidence of Noncardia Gastric Adenocarcinoma in a Large Diverse Population in the United States
Source: Gastroenterology - July 19, 2023 Category: Gastroenterology Tags: Continuing Medical Education (CME)/MOC Activities Source Type: research

Mauna Kea inks global commercialization deal with Cook Medical
Mauna Kea (ENT:MKEA) said today it inked a global commercialization partnership deal with Cook Medical for urology applications of its Cellvizio platform. Cellvizio is a confocal laser endomicroscopy system that provides images of cells and, in current implementations, helps doctors diagnose cancers of the stomach, oesophagus and bile ducts, Mauna Kea said. “We’re extremely pleased to partner with a global market leader such as Cook Medical to address the urology market with our unique confocal laser endomicroscopy technology. This 1st global commercial partnership is a major milestone of our new strategy t...
Source: Mass Device - December 10, 2015 Category: Medical Equipment Authors: Fink Densford Tags: Business/Financial News Imaging Cook Medical Mauna Kea Technologies Source Type: news

Make Intelligent of Gastric Cancer Diagnosis Error in Qazvin's Medical Centers: Using Data Mining Method.
CONCLUSION: According to the findings, the SVM algorithm showed the best results in classification of Test samples. So, this intelligent system can be used as a physician assistant in medical education hospitals, where the diagnosis processes are performed by medical students.<br />. PMID: 31554353 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention - September 27, 2019 Category: Cancer & Oncology Tags: Asian Pac J Cancer Prev Source Type: research

Woman diagnoses her own ovarian cancer with Google search
Sadie Rance turns to internet search engine for answers after being told stomach pains and constipation were due to Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Source: Telegraph Health - February 6, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: search ovarian Irritable Bowel Syndrome Sadie Rance diagnosed Cancer Google Source Type: news

Graph Flow: Cross-Layer Graph Flow Distillation for Dual Efficient Medical Image Segmentation
With the development of deep convolutional neural networks, medical image segmentation has achieved a series of breakthroughs in recent years. However, high-performance convolutional neural networks always mean numerous parameters and high computation costs, which will hinder the applications in resource-limited medical scenarios. Meanwhile, the scarceness of large-scale annotated medical image datasets further impedes the application of high-performance networks. To tackle these problems, we propose Graph Flow, a comprehensive knowledge distillation framework, for both network-efficiency and annotation-efficiency medical ...
Source: IEE Transactions on Medical Imaging - April 1, 2023 Category: Biomedical Engineering Source Type: research

Two medical pioneers aim to trial a cancer-killing virus. I aim to help out | Alexander Masters
A pair of researchers in Sweden may have a revolutionary cancer treatment on their hands. But a separate revolution will be needed to get it to marketJust north of Stockholm, among the creaking Swedish ice-forests, three revolutions for 2013 are taking place.Revolution One: Two researchers at the University of Uppsala have engineered a virus that will attack cancer. Cheap, precise, with only mild, flu-like side-effects, this plucky little microbe sounds too good to be true. Yet in peer-reviewed articles in top journals, Professor Magnus Essand and Dr Justyna Leja have repeatedly showed that Ad5[CgA-E1A-miR122]PTD views hea...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - January 4, 2013 Category: Science Authors: Alexander Masters Tags: Comment The Guardian Crowdsourcing Health Medical research Society Technology Kickstarter Features Cancer Internet Science Comment is free Source Type: news

Could dogs be better than medical devices at detecting cancer?
[Image from unsplash.com]Dogs in a small Japan town are being trained to detect stomach cancer through their scent to try to combat the high rates of stomach cancer in the area, according to media reports. The small 6,000-resident Japanese town of Kaneyama has high rates of stomach cancer and mayor Hiroshi Suzuki has taken to a sniffer dog research program to hopefully improve the accuracy of cancer screenings. Suzuki and medical school professor Masao Miyashita conducted a research program in the town that involved dogs sniffing out cancer from test samples. Get the full story on our sister site, Medical Design & Outs...
Source: Mass Device - June 29, 2017 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Danielle Kirsh Tags: Diagnostics Oncology Research & Development Cancer Medical Detection Dogs MedTech Nippon Medical School Chiba Hokusoh Hospital Source Type: news