Spoon family. : Dr. Arthur Spohn : surgeon, inventor, and Texas medical pioneer / Jane Clements Monday and Frances Brannen Vick ; with Charles Woodrow Monday Jr. ; introduction by Kenneth L. Mattox
Spoonbills -- Identification. : Storks, ibises and spoonbills of the world / James A. Hancock, James A. Kushlan and M. Philip Kahl ; illustrated by Alan Harris and David Quinn
Spooner, John C. (John Coit), 1843-1919. : John Coit Spooner, defender of presidents / by Dorothy Ganfield Fowler, Professor of History, Hunter College of the city of New York
Spoorelementen. : Handbook of groundwater remediation using permeable reactive barriers : applications to radionuclides, trace metals, and nutrients / edited by David L. Naftz [and others]
Acquired and inherited conditions that feature DYSTONIA as a primary manifestation of disease. These disorders are generally divided into generalized dystonias (e.g., dystonia musculorum deformans) and focal dystonias (e.g., writer's cramp). They are also classified by patterns of inheritance and by age of onset
Acquired and inherited conditions that feature DYSTONIA as a primary manifestation of disease. These disorders are generally divided into generalized dystonias (e.g., dystonia musculorum deformans) and focal dystonias (e.g., writer's cramp). They are also classified by patterns of inheritance and by age of onset
A malignant tumor arising from the nuclear layer of the retina that is the most common primary tumor of the eye in children. The tumor tends to occur in early childhood or infancy and may be present at birth. The majority are sporadic, but the condition may be transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait. Histologic features include dense cellularity, small round polygonal cells, and areas of calcification and necrosis. An abnormal pupil reflex (leukokoria); NYSTAGMUS, PATHOLOGIC; STRABISMUS; and visual loss represent common clinical characteristics of this condition. (From DeVita et al., Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology, 5th ed, p2104)
A malignant tumor arising from the nuclear layer of the retina that is the most common primary tumor of the eye in children. The tumor tends to occur in early childhood or infancy and may be present at birth. The majority are sporadic, but the condition may be transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait. Histologic features include dense cellularity, small round polygonal cells, and areas of calcification and necrosis. An abnormal pupil reflex (leukokoria); NYSTAGMUS, PATHOLOGIC; STRABISMUS; and visual loss represent common clinical characteristics of this condition. (From DeVita et al., Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology, 5th ed, p2104)
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Sporadische Gruppe : Symmetric generation of groups : with applications to many of the sporadic finite simple groups / Robert T. Curtis