You are seeing this message because your Web browser does not support basic Web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.


ABOUT ARCHIVES
Advanced Search

Welcome   | My Account | E-mail Alerts | Access Rights | Sign In


  Vol. 66 No. 1, January 1953 TABLE OF CONTENTS
  Archives
  •  Online Features
  ARTICLES
 This Article
 •References
 •Full text PDF
 •Send to a friend
 • Save in My Folder
 •Save to citation manager
 •Permissions
 Citing Articles
 •Citing articles on HighWire
 •Citing articles on Web of Science (68)
 •Contact me when this article is cited
 Related Content
 •Similar articles in this journal
 Social Bookmarking
  Add to CiteULike Add to Connotea Add to Del.icio.us Add to Digg Add to Reddit Add to Technorati Add to Twitter What's this?

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BENIGN BREAST DISEASE AND CANCER

EDWARD F. LEWISON, M.D.; JOHN G. LYONS, Jr., M.D.

AMA Arch Surg. 1953;66(1):94-114.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

MODERN medical vigilance and early cancer detection require an accurate appraisal of the importance of benign breast disease and its relation to cancer. The strength of such a study rests upon the weakness of our present modes of cancer diagnosis and therapy. Does the significance of chronic cystic mastitis lie in the insignificance with which it is so often regarded? Should patients with fibroadenosis look forward to the future as a promise or as a threat? Can we accept with confidence the vacillating voices of preeminence, or must we fall back upon ill-defined and intangible clinical judgment, the limitations of which are all too apparent in the candor of our own individual experience?

Each of us I am sure can recall a patient operated upon for a benign breast lesion, verified as innocent by pathologic examination, in whom some time later a carcinoma developed within the operative site. Or many . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

BALTIMORE; HARTFORD, CONN.

From the Breast Clinic, Division of the Tumor Clinic, Department of Surgery, the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore.


Footnotes

This paper was presented at the Sectional Meeting of the American College of Surgeons, Atlantic City, N. J., Feb. 11, 1952.

This investigation was supported in part by research grants from the S. Kann Sons Foundation, the Alexander and Selma H. Hecht Foundation, and the Marcelle Fleischmann Foundation (through the Maryland Division of the American Cancer Society).



Add to CiteULike CiteULike   Add to Connotea Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us Del.icio.us   Add to Digg Digg   Add to Reddit Reddit   Add to Technorati Technorati   Add to Twitter Twitter     What's this?





HOME | CURRENT ISSUE | PAST ISSUES | TOPIC COLLECTIONS | CME | SUBMIT | SUBSCRIBE | HELP
CONDITIONS OF USE | PRIVACY POLICY | CONTACT US | SITE MAP
 
© 1953 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.