Incidence of oral cancer.1988 Nature Publishing Groupdoi:10.1038/sj.bdj.4806581HindleNallyBritish dental journalHindle I, Nally F. Incidence of oral cancer. British Dentistry Journal 1991;170:432.
Incidence of oral cancer 来自 NCBI 喜欢 0 阅读量: 14 作者:I Hindle,F Nally 摘要: A desmoplastic fibroma of the maxillary sinus is reported in a 15-year-old boy. Desmoplastic fibroma is a rare benign tumor in the maxillofacial region. The features of this case and of 49 previously ...
The prevalence in the various age groups was about 50 to 100 times greater than for the Swedish population according to the 1959 Cancer Registry. It was primarily the small group of cases of leukoplakia in persons not using tobacco that were responsible for the excess morbidity from oral ...
— South Australian cancer registry data for the 1977–80 period indicated that 3.2 per cent of malignant neoplasms occurred in the mouth, over half of them on the lip. The male to female incidence ratio was 3.3:1 for all oral cancers and 6.3:1 for lip cases. The incidence of lip ...
The divide between city and rural, rich and poor, is, in many countries, found to be linked to the incidence of oral cancer. The aim of this study was to determine the trends in the incidence of oropharyngeal cancer (specifically cancer of the parotid and major salivary glands, pharynx, ...
The graphic shown here has been reproduced from The challenge of oral disease – a call for global action, the latest edition of The Oral Health Atlas published by the FDI World Dental Federation. It shows oral cancer incidence per 100,000 population of oral and lip cancer among those 15 ...
Cancer of the oral cavity are 4% of all cancers, being in 8th place in males and 11th in females. The world incidence in male sex is 7.9:100,000 and 2.2:100,000 in females. Squamous cell carcinoma is the most frequent, corresponding to 90-95% of the cases and tongue, lips and flo...
The purpose of the study was to characterize the total burden of oral cancer in Nova Scotia over the 15-year period from 1983 to 1997 and to identify any trends in the number of cases or incidence rates at specific anatomic sites or within specific age or sex groups over this time period...
Importance Oral tongue cancer (OTC) incidence has increased rapidly among young (<50 years) non-Hispanic White individuals in the US during the past 2 decades; however, it is unknown if age-associated trajectories have persisted. Objective To examine US trends in OTC inci...
Changes in the incidence of oral cancer based on anatomic location and demographic factors over time have been reported in the United States. The purpose of this study was to use recent data to examine oral cancer incidence trends and disparities by demographic factors and anatomic location. ...