5 results match your criteria: "an Affiliate of New York Medical College[Affiliation]"
Ann Afr Med
November 2021
Department of Gastroenterology, St. Michael's Medical Center, Newark, NJ, an Affiliate of New York Medical College, Westchester, NY, USA.
Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) contains properties and histologic markers of both neural crest cells and mesenchymal cells. It is a rare diagnosis, with an incidence of 1:100,000/year or 4%-10% of soft-tissue sarcomas. There are very few cases reported and studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cancer Res Ther
October 2020
Department of Medical Oncology, St Michael's Medical Center (an Affiliate of New York Medical College), Newark, New Jersey, USA.
Lymphoproliferative malignancies can involve both nodal- and extra-nodal tissues. The most common extranodal site involved is the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, and it is secondary to the widespread primary nodal disease. However, about 33% of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma primarily arise from tissues other than lymph nodes, spleen, or bone marrow, for example, GI tract, skin, or the central nervous system and are called primary extranodal lymphomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSouth Asian J Cancer
January 2020
Department of Medical Oncology, St Michael's Medical Center, Newark, NJ, an Affiliate of New York Medical College, Westchester, NY.
J Nat Sci Biol Med
January 2017
Department of Cardiology, St. Michael's Medical Center, An Affiliate of New York Medical College, New York, USA.
Amiodarone is an extremely effective antiarrhythmic drug that is known to cause many adverse effects such as pulmonary, thyroid, and liver toxicities. Of these, pulmonary toxicity is most serious. Pulmonary toxicity can present as interstitial pneumonitis, organizing pneumonia, pulmonary nodules and masses, and very rarely pleural effusions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLung India
May 2016
Department of Internal Medicine, Newark, NJ, An Affiliate of New York Medical College, NY, USA; Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Saint Michael's Medical Center, Newark, NJ, An Affiliate of New York Medical College, NY, USA.
Diaphragmatic paralysis is an unusual and often underrecognized cause of dyspnea. We present a case of bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis with no identifiable etiology. Our patient is a 73-year-old female with a history of smoking who presented with dyspnea and orthopnea.
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