Publications by authors named "V Stanimirovic"

Article Synopsis
  • - Lesbian, gay, and bisexual individuals have specific healthcare needs, with breast cancer being the leading cancer among women globally; however, transgender individuals face significant barriers to screening for this disease, with a notably low incidence of breast cancer documented among them.
  • - Only 13 cases of breast cancer in female-to-male transsexuals have been reported in the literature, with findings showing those tumors tend to be estrogen and progesterone-positive invasive ductal carcinoma.
  • - There is a need for improved breast cancer screening programs tailored to transgender individuals, considering their unique anatomical and clinical aspects, as current guidelines are not fully addressing their healthcare requirements.
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The incidence of breast carcinoma following prophylactic mastectomy is probably less than 2%. We present a 43-year-old female to male transsexual who developed breast cancer 1 year after bilateral nipple- sparing subcutaneous mastectomy as part of female to male gender reassignment surgery. In addition to gender reassignment surgery, total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (to avoid the patient from entering menopause and to eliminate any subsequent risk of iatrogenic endometrial carcinoma), colpocleisys, metoidioplasty, phalloplasty, urethroplasty together with scrotoplasty/placement of testicular prosthesis and perineoplasty were also performed.

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Introduction: In more than 50 years since the first demonstration of the immune basis for thyroiditis was done, the autoimmune disease has been identified as a major cause of disfunction of all endocrine organs. Identification of the antithyroid with the radioreceptor assay is widespread in clinical use for differential diagnosis of other thyroid disorders manifesting with the hyperthyroidism.

Material And Methods: Our study included 44 patients with new onset Graves disease which was primarily verified according to the objective status of the patients (signs of hyperthyroidism), biochemical parameters (which included thyroid hormones) and detection of the TRAb (TSAb- thyreotropin-stimulating antibodies) at the beginning of diagnosis and in the first, second and after the third month since the introduction of antithyroid therapy (propiltiouracil).

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Screening is the identification of a preclinical disease by a relatively simple test. It is usually regarded as public health policy that is applied to population. The aim is to identify disease not recognized by the health services and the term preclinical refers rather to such an unrecognized disease than to clinical detectability or recognition.

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