Lexicographical Neighbors of Osteomata
Literary usage of Osteomata
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Introduction to pathology and morbid anatomy by Thomas Henry Green (1889)
"The osteomata are tumors consisting of bone, either compact or ... The osteomata
being the result of the ossification of ..."
2. A Text-book of Pathology by William George MacCallum (1916)
"... or osteomata, it is rather because their tissues closely resemble fibrous,
fatty, cartilaginous, or bony tissue, than that we can actually trace their ..."
3. Tumors, innocent and malignant by John Bland-Sutton (1907)
"Compact osteomata.—These occur as sessile tumours on the parietal and frontal
... Large osteomata of the facial bones sometimes produce hideous deformity, ..."
4. A Manual of Pathological Histology: To Serve as an Introduction to the Study by Georg Eduard von Rindfleisch, E. Buchanan Baxter (1872)
"osteomata or Bony Tumours. § 144. Bony tumours in some respects resemble ...
osteomata are undoubtedly very rare. f. Myomata. Under this name we include all ..."
5. General Surgical Pathology and Therapeutics: In Fifty-one Lectures by Theodor Billroth, Charles Elihu Hackley, Alexander von Winiwarter (1883)
"osteomata: Forms; Operation. 1. FIBROMA—FIBROUS TUMOR—CONNECTIVE-TISSUE TUMOR.
TUMORS composed chiefly of developed connective tissue are called ..."
6. Practical Pathology and Morbid Histology by Heneage Gibbes (1891)
"TRUE osteomata are a further step in the development than that described under
... osteomata have been described as primary growths, but are extremely rare. ..."
7. Clinical Surgery: Extracts from the Reports of Surgical Practice Between the by Theodor Billroth, Clinton Thomas Dent (1881)
"... multiple osteomata ; neuro-fibroma ; recurrent ditto ; cavernous lymphatic
tumour (a) ; melanoma ; pulsating sarcoma ..."