scholarly journals Fertility preservation surgeries and reproductive technologies in patients with early ovarian cancer and borderline tumors

2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 547-553
Author(s):  
Olga Lavrinovich ◽  
Mariia Iakovleva ◽  
Igor Berlev ◽  
Adel Urmancheeva

Currently, available data indicate the oncological safety and high efficiency of fertility preservation surgeries and reproductive technologies in patients with early ovarian cancer.  The international scientific community is increasingly discussing the importance of timely patient information and the implementation of fertility preservation strategies in patients with early ovarian cancer.  Research in this area should be continued due to the lack of reliable data.

Author(s):  
Daniel Necula ◽  
Daria Istrate ◽  
Jérôme Mathis

AbstractFertility preservation is an important option to consider for young women with low-grade early ovarian cancer. Fertility-sparing surgery (“FSS”) permits the conservation of the uterus and one of the ovaries. This technique is considered safe for stages IA G1, G2 and probably safe for IC G1 epithelial and non-epithelial ovarian cancers. There are still uncertainties and FSS is not fully accepted for stage IC G1, G2 and clear cell carcinoma. The difficulty in choosing the best option lies in the fact that there is a lack of prospective randomized studies, due to ethical and organizational issues. Retrospective studies and reviews showed reassuring results for FSS in terms of relapse and long term survival. The spontaneous pregnancy rate seems to decrease after FSS, but chemotherapy does not seem to have an impact on fertility rates. Compared with the general population, assisted reproductive techniques are considered safe and with similar fertility results.


2011 ◽  
Vol 71 (08) ◽  
Author(s):  
MJ Battista ◽  
J Steetskamp ◽  
N Mantai ◽  
S Gebhard ◽  
C Cotarelo ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Yulia V. Samodova

Information on the coming Open Access Week which will be held from 19 to 23 October 2009. Interest in the results of scientific researches all over the world has led to consolidation of forces of the international scientific community and to expand the now-annual event from a single day to seven days.


Author(s):  
Diana Žilovič ◽  
Rūta Čiurlienė ◽  
Ieva Vaicekauskaitė ◽  
Rasa Sabaliauskaitė ◽  
Sonata Jarmalaitė

Author(s):  
Marco Petrillo ◽  
Giulio Sozzi ◽  
Margherita Dessole ◽  
Giampiero Capobianco ◽  
Salvatore Dessole ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 313-333
Author(s):  
Dana Müller ◽  
Stefanie Wolter

AbstractThe Research Data Centre at the Institute for Employment Research (RDC-IAB) has been offering high-quality administrative and survey data on the German labour market for 15 years and has become one of the most important locations worldwide for researchers interested in data for labour market research. This article provides an overview of the RDC-IAB, including its data and access modes. The article presents two datasets in more detail: the Sample of Integrated Employment Biographies, a classic dataset, and the Linked Personnel Panel, a new dataset. Finally, this article provides insights into future infrastructure and data developments.


2020 ◽  
Vol 114 (3) ◽  
pp. e257
Author(s):  
Alex Robles ◽  
Brittany Noel Robles ◽  
Laura C. Gemmell ◽  
Paula C. Brady

2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-55
Author(s):  
José G. Perillán

John S. Bell openly questioned the dominance of an orthodox quantum interpretation that had seemingly raised the principle of indeterminism from an epistemological question to an ontological truth in the late 1920s. He understood the inevitability of indeterminism to be a theoretical choice made by the founding architects of quantum theory, not a fundamental principle of reality necessitated by experimental facts. As a result, Bell decried the general lull in quantum interpretation debates within the physics community, and in particular, the complete omission of Louis de Broglie’s deterministic pilot wave interpretation from all theoretical and pedagogical discourses. This paper reexamines the pilot wave’s rise, abandonment, and subsequent omission in the history of quantum theory. What emerges is not a straightforward story of victimization and hegemonic marginalization. Instead, it is a story that grapples with tensions between the polyphony of individual voices and a physics community’s evolving identity and consensus in response to particular sociopolitical and scientific contexts. At the heart of these tensions sits an international scientific community transitioning from a politically fractured and intellectually divergent community to one embracing a somewhat forced pragmatic convergence around rationally reconstructed narratives and concepts like the impossibility of determinism. The story of the pilot wave’s omission gives us a window into the inherent power that theoretical choice and a congealing rhetoric of orthodoxy have on a scientific community’s consensus, pedagogical canons, and the future development of science itself.


2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong-Soon Kwon ◽  
Ho-Suap Hahn ◽  
Tae-Jin Kim ◽  
In-Ho Lee ◽  
Kyung-Taek Lim ◽  
...  

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